How Collections Affect Your Credit Score
A collection account signals to lenders that you failed to pay a debt and it was sent to a third-party collector. The impact on your score depends on:
- Age: A fresh collection (under 1 year) hurts more than a 5-year-old collection
- Amount: A $50 medical bill collection hurts nearly as much as a $5,000 collection
- Score level: A collection drops a 780 score more points than a 580 score (higher scores have more to lose)
- FICO version: Newer FICO versions (9, 10) ignore paid collections and medical collections under $500. Older versions (FICO 8) count all collections.
The good news: Collections become less impactful over time and fall off your report entirely after 7 years from the original delinquency date.
Method 1: Dispute Errors (Free, Fastest)
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) requires that all information on your credit report be accurate, complete, and verifiable. If a collection has any errors, you can dispute it and potentially have it removed entirely.
Common collection errors:
- Wrong account number or balance
- Collection reported as newer than it actually is (re-aging)
- Debt you already paid
- Debt that isn't yours (identity theft or mixed files)
- Debt past the 7-year reporting limit
- Duplicate entries for the same debt
How to dispute:
1. Get your credit reports from all 3 bureaus at AnnualCreditReport.com
2. Identify the error with documentation
3. File a dispute online at Equifax.com, Experian.com, or TransUnion.com
4. The bureau contacts the collection agency to verify
5. If the agency can't verify within 30 days, the collection must be removed
6. If removed, your score updates within 30–45 days
Pro tip: Dispute with all 3 bureaus simultaneously. A collection may be on one bureau but not others.
Method 2: Pay-for-Delete Negotiation
Pay-for-delete is an agreement where you pay the collection agency in exchange for them removing the collection from your credit report. It's not guaranteed — collection agencies aren't required to agree — but it works often enough to be worth trying.
How to negotiate pay-for-delete:
1. Contact the collection agency in writing (not by phone — you want a paper trail)
2. Offer to pay the full amount (or negotiate a settlement) in exchange for deletion
3. Get the agreement in writing BEFORE making any payment
4. Make the payment
5. Verify the collection is removed from all 3 bureaus within 30–60 days
Sample language: "I am willing to pay [amount] as full settlement of account [number] in exchange for your agreement to request deletion of this account from all three major credit bureaus within 30 days of payment. Please confirm this agreement in writing before I submit payment."
Important: Never pay a collection without a written pay-for-delete agreement. Once you pay, you lose all negotiating leverage.
Method 3: Goodwill Deletion Request
If you paid a collection and it's still on your report, or if the collection was due to a genuine hardship (job loss, medical emergency), you can write a goodwill deletion letter asking the creditor to remove it as a courtesy.
This works best when:
- You have an otherwise good payment history
- The collection was an isolated incident
- You've been a customer of the original creditor for years
- The collection is paid in full
Goodwill letters don't always work, but they cost nothing to send and occasionally succeed — especially with original creditors (not third-party collectors).
Method 4: Wait It Out (7-Year Rule)
If a collection is accurate and the agency won't negotiate, your last option is time. Collections must be removed from your credit report 7 years from the date of the original delinquency — not the date the collection was opened.
Key dates:
- The 7-year clock starts from the date you first missed the payment that led to the collection
- Collection agencies sometimes try to "re-age" debts by reporting a newer date — this is illegal
- If a collection is approaching 7 years, it may not be worth paying (especially if it's already paid)
Statute of limitations vs. credit reporting:
The statute of limitations (how long a collector can sue you) is different from the 7-year credit reporting period. In most states, the statute of limitations is 3–6 years. After that, collectors can still contact you but can't sue.
Medical Collections: Special Rules
Medical collections have special treatment under newer credit scoring models:
- FICO 9 and VantageScore 4.0: Ignore paid medical collections entirely
- FICO 10: Ignores medical collections under $500
- Starting 2023: The three major bureaus agreed to remove medical collections under $500 from credit reports entirely
- Starting 2025: Unpaid medical collections must be at least 1 year old before appearing on credit reports (up from 6 months)
If you have medical collections:
- Check if they're under $500 (may already be removed)
- Check if they're paid (may be ignored by newer scoring models)
- Dispute any errors in the amount or dates
- Contact the hospital's financial assistance office — many have charity care programs that can retroactively forgive the debt
Can you remove a collection from your credit report?
Yes, in several ways: (1) Dispute errors — if the collection has any inaccuracies, it can be removed. (2) Pay-for-delete — negotiate removal in exchange for payment. (3) Goodwill deletion — ask the creditor to remove it as a courtesy. (4) Wait 7 years — collections automatically fall off after 7 years from the original delinquency date.
Does paying a collection remove it from your credit report?
Not automatically. Paying a collection changes its status to 'paid' but doesn't remove it from your report. It will still show for 7 years. To get it removed, you need a pay-for-delete agreement in writing before paying, or you need to request a goodwill deletion after paying.
How much does a collection hurt your credit score?
A collection can drop your score 50–150 points depending on your starting score and the age of the collection. A fresh collection on a 750 score can drop it to 600–650. A 5-year-old collection on a 580 score has less impact. Collections become less impactful as they age and fall off entirely after 7 years.
Can a collection agency sue me for old debt?
Yes, but only within the statute of limitations — typically 3–6 years depending on your state. After that, the debt is 'time-barred' and collectors can't sue. However, making a payment or acknowledging the debt in writing can restart the statute of limitations clock in some states.