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Ccj Conflicting Answers - Help
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Does a CCJ come off your credit file after 6 years, period. Or.... does it come off your credit file 6 years after it's satisfied?
Please only answer this if you are 100% sure as all the threads about CCJ's people say both.
Please only answer this if you are 100% sure as all the threads about CCJ's people say both.
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http://www.experian.co.uk/consumer/credit-reports-explained.html
http://www.experian.co.uk/consumer/credit-reports-explained.html
Have a read of this, I can only give a link to the pdf. Should it now work then the form you need is EX320.
http://hmctsformfinder.justice.gov.uk/HMCTS/GetLeaflet.do?court_leaflets_id=215
http://hmctsformfinder.justice.gov.uk/HMCTS/GetLeaflet.do?court_leaflets_id=215
If you had searched the Experian link kindly supplied by factor30 you would see that judgements are automatically removed 6 years after the date of the original court case.
http://experian.metafaq.com/help/Statutory/Credit_report/CCJ_judge_decrees
http://experian.metafaq.com/help/Statutory/Credit_report/CCJ_judge_decrees
I think there are so many variables with what you ask some, highly qualified and helpful, people such as f30 do not wish to give you the wrong information to what appears a simple question, but the possible ramifications are not. The usual time scale for debts is 6 years from the date of the Judgment for claimant letter.
But has your creditor been back to court? Have you made a payment? Have you acknowledged the debt? These and other possible difficulties may stand in the way of free information on the statute of limitations.
But has your creditor been back to court? Have you made a payment? Have you acknowledged the debt? These and other possible difficulties may stand in the way of free information on the statute of limitations.
To clarify the above:
If you pay the debt off within one month of the judgement the court record (which is a public document) is deleted.
If you fail to pay the debt off within one month the court record remains in place for 6 years but you can apply to have it marked as 'satisfied' if you pay off the debt during that period. (There's a £15 fee involved).:
https://www.gov.uk/county-court-judgments-ccj-for-debt/ccjs-and-your-credit-rating
However credit providers aren't obliged to ignore old CCJs, even if they're no longer on the official register. For example, if you applied for credit now and the lender saw a CCJ on your record, you'd probably be refused credit. If you then applied for credit 10 years later (and then records still showed that you'd been refused credit in 2012) they would not be obliged to take the '6 year period' into account, and could still refuse you credit if they chose to do so.
Chris
If you pay the debt off within one month of the judgement the court record (which is a public document) is deleted.
If you fail to pay the debt off within one month the court record remains in place for 6 years but you can apply to have it marked as 'satisfied' if you pay off the debt during that period. (There's a £15 fee involved).:
https://www.gov.uk/county-court-judgments-ccj-for-debt/ccjs-and-your-credit-rating
However credit providers aren't obliged to ignore old CCJs, even if they're no longer on the official register. For example, if you applied for credit now and the lender saw a CCJ on your record, you'd probably be refused credit. If you then applied for credit 10 years later (and then records still showed that you'd been refused credit in 2012) they would not be obliged to take the '6 year period' into account, and could still refuse you credit if they chose to do so.
Chris
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