A Credit Repair Organization (CRO) is any business that offers to improve your credit in exchange for payment. Federal law gives you specific rights when you hire one — and specific protections against common industry abuses. Here is what you need to know before signing anything.
Get a Free Credit Consultation
Under federal law, a Credit Repair Organization is any person or company that offers services to improve a consumer’s credit record, history, or rating in exchange for payment. The Credit Repair Organizations Act (CROA), passed in 1996 and codified at 15 U.S.C. Section 1679, is the federal law that governs them.
Legal definition (15 U.S.C. 1679a): A “credit repair organization” means any person who uses any instrumentality of interstate commerce or the mails to sell, provide, or perform (or represent that such person can or will sell, provide, or perform) any service in return for the payment of money or other valuable consideration, for the express or implied purpose of improving any consumer’s credit record, credit history, or credit rating.
This definition is broad by design. It covers large national firms, local “credit consultants,” attorneys who offer credit repair as part of their practice, and online platforms that charge a fee to dispute items on your behalf. If money changes hands and the promise involves improving your credit, it is a CRO under federal law — and all CROA protections apply to you.
What is NOT a CRO: nonprofit credit counseling agencies (like NFCC members), banks and credit unions acting in their normal capacity, and attorneys who do not charge separately for credit repair services.
Congress passed CROA specifically because the credit repair industry had a well-documented history of fraud. These six rights exist to protect you every time you hire a credit repair organization.
A CRO cannot charge you any money before fully performing the services it has agreed to provide. This is the most violated right in the industry. If a company asks for payment before doing any work, that is a federal violation.
You have the right to cancel your contract with a CRO within three business days of signing at no cost. The company must tell you this in writing. If they do not include this notice in your contract, the contract is voidable.
Every CRO must provide you with a written contract before performing any services or receiving any payment. The contract must specify all services to be performed, the total cost, and the timeframe for results.
Before signing any contract, a CRO must give you a written disclosure explaining that you have the right to dispute your own credit for free, that you can sue credit bureaus and creditors for FCRA violations, and that accurate information cannot legally be removed.
A CRO cannot make false or misleading statements about their services, your rights, or what they can accomplish. This includes claiming they can remove accurate negative information, guarantee specific score increases, or create a “new credit identity.”
If a CRO violates CROA, you can sue them in federal court for actual damages, punitive damages, and attorney fees. Statutory damages are up to $1,000 per violation. Class actions are also permitted under the statute.
Credit law involves three overlapping federal statutes. Understanding what each one covers helps you know which protection applies to your situation.
| Law | Protects You From | Who It Governs | Key Right |
|---|---|---|---|
| CROA (Credit Repair Organizations Act) | Fraudulent credit repair companies | Credit repair organizations | No advance fees, written contract, 3-day cancellation |
| FCRA (Fair Credit Reporting Act) | Inaccurate credit reporting | Credit bureaus and data furnishers | Right to dispute inaccurate information for free |
| FDCPA (Fair Debt Collection Practices Act) | Abusive debt collection | Third-party debt collectors | Right to request debt verification, cease communication |
A legitimate credit repair organization uses all three laws on your behalf: FCRA to dispute inaccurate bureau data, FDCPA to push back against collector violations, and CROA itself as the framework under which they must operate with you. A company that has never heard of CROA, or waves off questions about their contract, is a problem.
The FTC and CFPB receive thousands of complaints about credit repair organizations every year. These are the warning signs that should make you walk away immediately.
This is illegal under CROA. If a company asks for payment before performing any services, they are violating federal law. Full stop.
No one can legally guarantee your score will reach a specific number. Results depend on what is on your report and how bureaus and creditors respond. Any guarantee is a deceptive practice.
This is the CPN (Credit Privacy Number) scam. Using a fake SSN or EIN as a new identity to apply for credit is federal fraud — for you and the company selling it.
Accurate, verifiable negative information within the reporting period (7 years for most items) cannot be removed by disputing. Any company claiming otherwise is lying.
CROA requires a written contract before any services are performed. If a company skips this step, they are violating the law and you have no documented protection.
A legitimate CRO can tell you exactly which items they plan to dispute, why, and what law supports each dispute. Vague answers, pressure tactics, or “trade secret” explanations are red flags.
If a credit repair organization violates any of these CROA provisions, you can sue them in federal court for actual damages, punitive damages up to $1,000 per violation, and attorney fees. File a complaint with the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov and the CFPB at consumerfinance.gov/complaint.
Choosing a CRO comes down to verifying compliance, understanding the contract, and asking the right questions before any money moves.
The correct answer is no. Any hesitation or explanation for why they need a “deposit” or “setup fee” upfront is a CROA violation in progress.
The disclosure statement must inform you that you have the right to dispute your own credit for free and that accurate information cannot be removed. Both documents are legally required.
Find the cancellation clause. It must state you can cancel within three business days at no cost. If it is missing, the contract does not comply with CROA.
A legitimate CRO reviews your reports first, identifies specific items, and explains which FCRA provision makes each item disputable. Generic answers mean generic (ineffective) disputes.
Search the company name at consumerfinance.gov/data-research/consumer-complaints and bbb.org. Look at how the company responds to complaints, not just the number of them.
Every protection CROA gives you, we honor by default — not because we have to, but because operating any other way is fraud.
We never charge before performing services. Your first payment does not come until after your service agreement is in place and work has begun.
You receive a written service agreement that specifies exactly what we will do, what it costs, and your three-day right to cancel — before any work starts.
We show you every item we are targeting, the legal basis for each dispute, and the outcome of every investigation cycle. No black boxes.
“I had been burned by a credit repair company that charged me $300 upfront and then disappeared. Legendary Ways explained CROA to me on the first call, showed me their contract before I paid anything, and actually did what they said they would do.”
“I did not even know I had rights under federal law until they walked me through CROA on our consultation. The fact that they led with ‘here is what you are legally entitled to’ told me everything I needed to know about whether to trust them.”
“They gave me the written disclosure, the contract, and the cancellation notice before I paid a single dollar. Went from 541 to 688 in five months. No gimmicks, no fake promises — just the actual dispute process done correctly.”
Under the Credit Repair Organizations Act (CROA), a credit repair organization is any business or individual that offers to improve your credit record, credit history, or credit rating in exchange for payment. This includes for-profit credit repair firms, online dispute platforms, and credit consultants who charge fees. Federal law requires all CROs to follow specific rules: no advance fees, written contracts, three-day cancellation rights, and no false representations about what they can do.
Yes, legitimate credit repair organizations exist and can be genuinely useful for people with inaccurate negative items on their credit reports. The key is verifying that the company follows CROA: no upfront fees, written contract provided, three-day cancellation right honored, and no guarantees of results that are legally impossible (removing accurate information). Companies that do not follow these rules are not just illegitimate — they are committing federal violations you can sue them for.
No. A CRO can dispute items that are inaccurate, unverifiable, or outside the legal reporting period (generally 7 years for most negative items, 10 for Chapter 7 bankruptcy). Accurate negative information reported within the legal window cannot be legally removed by disputing — it must age off. Any company claiming it can remove all negatives is misrepresenting what is legally possible under CROA and the FCRA.
Under CROA, before any payment and before any services are performed, a credit repair organization must provide: (1) a written disclosure statement informing you that you can dispute credit for free yourself, that accurate information cannot be removed, and that you can sue bureaus and creditors for violations; and (2) a written contract specifying all services, total cost, timeframe, and your three-day right to cancel. If either document is missing, that is a CROA violation.
Yes. Under CROA, you have the right to cancel any credit repair contract within three business days of signing, for any reason, at no cost. This right is mandatory — no credit repair company can waive it or make you sign it away. To cancel, send written notice to the company (certified mail is best for documentation). If the company charges you a cancellation fee or refuses to cancel within the three-day window, they are violating federal law.
A credit repair organization is a for-profit entity that disputes credit report items on your behalf. A nonprofit credit counseling agency (like members of the National Foundation for Credit Counseling) helps you manage debt, negotiate payment plans with creditors, and build budgets — they do not typically dispute bureau entries. Nonprofit counselors are not CROs under the law and operate under a different regulatory framework. Both can be useful depending on your situation: if your problem is inaccurate negative items, a CRO; if your problem is overwhelming debt you cannot pay, a nonprofit counselor.
You have several remedies. File a complaint with the CFPB at consumerfinance.gov/complaint and the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov. File a complaint with your state attorney general. Sue the company in federal court under CROA for actual damages, statutory damages up to $1,000 per violation, punitive damages, and attorney fees. If the company used mail or wire communications to defraud you, that is also a federal criminal matter you can report to the FBI at ic3.gov.
Legendary Ways Credit Solution follows every CROA requirement by design. Free consultation, no upfront fee, written contract, and a clear three-day cancellation right — before you commit to anything.
Legendary Ways Credit Solution is a credit repair organization as defined under the Credit Repair Organizations Act (CROA), 15 U.S.C. Section 1679 et seq. We do not charge fees before performing services. You have the right to cancel your service agreement within three business days of signing at no cost to you. You have the right to dispute inaccurate information on your credit report directly with the credit bureaus at no charge. We do not guarantee the removal of any specific item or any specific score increase. Results vary based on individual credit history and the response of credit bureaus and data furnishers. This page is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Credit repair services are not available in all states.