Freeze and unfreeze credit reports for free
Question: I’d like to freeze my credit record to protect against identity theft. I heard that Congress recently passed a law making credit freezes free. When can I get my free freeze?
Answer: A credit freeze prevents new creditors from reviewing your credit report, making it harder for identity thieves to take out credit in your name.
Congress recently passed a law that will prohibit the three big credit bureaus — Equifax, Experian and TransUnion — from charging a fee to place or lift a credit freeze. The free freezes will be available throughout the country this fall; the credit bureaus have until September 21 to implement the new law.
Until the new law goes into effect, the cost to freeze your credit record varies by state. In many states, each credit bureau charges $5 to $10 to freeze your credit record, and may charge a similar fee to lift the freeze if you’re applying for a loan. (To hinder ID thieves, you need to freeze your record at all three credit bureaus.)
But several states recently passed laws to eliminate credit-freeze fees. You can place a free credit freeze in Colorado, Indiana, Maine, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, Utah and Washington, D.C. (You may need to pay a fee to lift the freeze in some of these states.) By the end of June, Michigan, Nebraska, Oregon and Washington state will also be offering free credit freezes.
Go to www.equifax.com, www.experian.com and www.transunion.com to initiate the freeze and find out more about the cost and procedures.
Also check with your state attorney general’s office or consumer protection bureau to find out whether your state offers additional consumer protections on security freezes beyond what the federal law provides.
© 2018 The Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.