How to Remove Late Payments From Your Credit Report
May 8, 2026 | 7 min read
May 8, 2026 | 7 min read
Late payments are one of the most damaging types of negative information on a credit report. They affect your payment history — the largest single factor in most credit scoring models — and they can stay on your report for up to seven years from the original date of delinquency. The good news is that not every late payment has to stay there. If a late mark is inaccurate, unverifiable, or reported past its legal deadline, you have the right under federal law to challenge it. This guide walks through how the process works, when it is likely to succeed, and what Credit Saint’s team can do to help.
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A late payment usually appears on your credit report after you miss a payment by 30 days or more. Lenders generally do not report a payment as late to the credit bureaus until you are at least 30 days past due — payments that are a few days late typically result only in a late fee from the creditor, not a credit reporting consequence.
Once reported, the late payment is recorded with a status reflecting how far past due you were: 30 days late, 60 days late, 90 days late, 120+ days late, and so on. The further the delinquency progressed, the more damaging the entry. A single 30-day late payment is far less harmful than a 90-day late payment that eventually became a charge-off.
Under the FCRA, late payments may remain on your credit report for up to seven years from the original date of delinquency — the date you first missed the payment that led to the negative status. After that seven-year window, the entry must legally fall off your report.
This is the central question, and the honest answer is: it depends on whether the late payment is accurate.
A late payment can be challenged and potentially removed when it falls into any of these categories:
A late payment generally cannot be removed before its seven-year window ends if all of the following are true: the payment really was late, the lender has documentation to verify it, the date of first delinquency is being reported correctly, and the account belongs to you.
Any company that promises to remove an accurate, verified, properly reported late payment is making a claim it cannot legally support. That is exactly the type of conduct CROA was designed to prohibit.
Whether you handle this on your own or work with a credit repair company like Credit Saint, the underlying process is the same. Here is the structure.
You need to see what is actually being reported. Pull your reports from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. You can request free reports from AnnualCreditReport.com, the official source authorized under the FCRA. The same late payment may be reported differently across bureaus — sometimes only one bureau is showing the late mark, or each bureau may have a different date of first delinquency.
For each late payment, note:
Inconsistencies between bureaus are a common signal that something may be inaccurate or unverifiable.
Disputes are stronger when supported by documentation. Useful evidence includes:
If the late payment is past the seven-year window, the documentation is the report itself — the date of first delinquency on the entry is the proof.
Disputes can be submitted to each credit bureau by mail or through their online portals. Each bureau has its own dispute process. The dispute should clearly identify the item, state why it is being challenged, and include supporting documentation.
Disputes can also be submitted directly to the data furnisher — the creditor or debt collector that reported the late payment. Disputing with both the bureau and the furnisher tends to be more effective than disputing with the bureau alone.
Under the FCRA, credit bureaus have up to 30 days to investigate a dispute and respond. The bureau is required to forward the dispute to the data furnisher, which must verify or correct the disputed information.
Possible outcomes:
If a late payment is verified and you have new evidence that supports your position, you can re-dispute. Re-disputes with stronger documentation, or with disputes routed through different channels, can sometimes succeed where a first dispute did not.
The dispute process is something you can do yourself. It is also something that takes time, attention to detail, knowledge of consumer protection law, and meticulous record-keeping over weeks or months of correspondence.
Credit Saint’s team handles every step. We pull your reports across all three bureaus, review late-payment entries line by line, identify which ones appear most likely to be successfully challenged, draft and submit formal disputes to the credit bureaus and data furnishers, and follow up through any re-disputes or escalations. You review the findings, authorize the action, and stay informed — we handle the rest.
The 90-day money-back guarantee is tied to whether negative items have been successfully challenged in the first 90 days, which connects the guarantee directly to the dispute work being performed.
For a deeper look at how the process works under federal law, see our guide on what credit repair is and how it works.
Be cautious of any service or strategy that promises:
These practices are not just ineffective — some are explicitly prohibited under CROA and federal law. The Credit Repair Organizations Act prohibits credit repair companies from charging upfront fees before services are performed, requires a written contract, and gives consumers three business days to cancel without penalty. A legitimate company will not bypass any of those rules.
Reviewed By:
Ashley Davison
Editor
Ashley is currently the Chief Compliance Officer for Credit Saint, previously the Chief Operating Officer. Ashley got into the Financial world by working as a Logistics Coordinator at Ernst & Young. Coming from a previous career in education, she is eager to teach the world everything she knows and learn everything that she doesn’t! Ashley is a FICO® certified professional, a Board Certified Credit Consultant, a Certified Credit Score Consultant with the Credit Consultants Association of America, UDAAP certified, and holds a Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) Compliance Certificate.