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How long it take for credit scores and FICO score goes up?
Can you be more specific as to what you're getting at here?
Scores go up slowly over time unless major changes (be them positive or negative) take place.
Credit bureaus aren't responsible for deciding what is on your credit reports nor are they responsible for your credit scores and/or when they go up. Bureaus simply compile data based on what is provided to them by various lenders. That data can be fed into a scoring model to produce a score. If something is accurate on your credit report, your gripe is with the lender that provided the inaccurate information to the CRAs, not the CRAs themselves. The bureaus don't "make decisions that can help people or hurt them." You say you don't like how the population is being kept in check. I think it's a great thing. Perhaps you don't like that you're being kept in check? FICO scores are a measure of risk. If risk level is too high, people aren't given access to credit... things like the loan that you're seeking out. This can actually keep a lot of people out of [financial] trouble, so I don't see it as a negative. I'd suggest thinking that through a bit more and seeing the big picture. I'm quite sure our reaction/opinion to this is emotionally based. That's perfectly normal, by the way.
When you say "credit score and FICO score" what do you mean? Are you differentiating between FICO scoring models and other ones (VantageScore 3.0 perhaps)? What source do you use to obtain your scores?
If you'd like some solid guesses as to when your scores may go up, you're going to have to list out a lot of information regarding your credit profile. For starters, how many total accounts you have, how many are revolving credit lines and if you have any installment loans, what the balances and limits are on each revolving credit line and installment loan current balances/original balances, what the age of your youngest account is, oldest account and average age of accounts, how many inquiries you've had in the last year and when, how many negative items you have on your credit report listed out with the date they happened and their severity... example: 60 day late from 7/14, collection from 9/12, etc. Once you give us some detailed information we'll be able to give you some solid estimates.
I would say you're probably doing something incorrect with respect to your disputes, then. It's rare that if something is past the date to fall off that if it doesn't fall off a person would have difficulty getting it removed when requested. I read these forums a lot and don't recall running into this issue.
Creditors do not remove items from your credit report. They submit electronic requests to the bureaus to have item removed. If they have sent a request, it is up to the bureau(s) to make the update. If they have not sent a request, the bureaus have no reason to update. If your creditor is saying they sent a request and you are not seeing the update, you can request the creditor re-submit the request. If that still doesn't work, you can ask the creditor to provide you with something in writing saying that they sent the request, then pass that documentation on the the bureau(s) with which the item still remains and ask that it be removed. This entire process shouldn't take more than a week or two, which is a drop in the bucket when looking at the long timeline of things credit-related.
Scores are not "updated every 30 days." Your credit profile is ever-changing. One could go a month where absolutely nothing changes (except for everything aging 1 month) which could mean zero score change. One could also go a month where something changes every few days, so their score then could potentially change every few days. The bureaus have the data that is pulled and used to generate a score. If their data on Monday is different than their data on Tuesday and you pull a score each day, it's completely possible that your score would change from one day to the next. There is no such thing as 30 days here, unless you're talking about a service that provides you with a score every 30 days. If that's what you mean, yes you'll get a new score every 30 days, but you could have gotten a new score 29 days ago, 28 days ago, etc. if you had pulled one from another source.
You're obviously doing the dispute process incorrectly somewhere.
If you're disputing via phone or online (website), both of those are wrong, so don't do it that way. Disputing too many times online and over the phone can get your flagged and make it next to impossible to dispute properly.
Can you tell us how you've submitted disputes in the past?
I have NEVER had the bureaus refuse to delete something wrong, but I don't dispute via the phone or online either.