Home Investment How To Get A Free Credit Report Every Week From Equifax, Experian, And TransUnion

How To Get A Free Credit Report Every Week From Equifax, Experian, And TransUnion

by Deidre Salcido
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Knowing what’s on your credit report is the difference between getting approved for a mortgage at the best rate and getting denied — or worse, getting hit with fraud you don’t catch for months. Errors on your report can quietly drag down your credit score. Identity thieves can run up debt in your name for a year before you notice.

The good news for 2026: you can pull your full credit report from all three major bureaus (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion) for free every week. You can also check your credit score for free from a half-dozen reputable sources, including FICO scores from card issuers that don’t require you to be a customer.

Here’s exactly how to do it, plus what to look for once you have the report in hand.

Credit Report vs. Credit Score: A Quick Distinction

Two different things, often confused:

  • Credit report: the full record of your borrowing history. Accounts, balances, payment history, public records, hard inquiries.
  • Credit score: a three-digit number (typically 300–850) calculated from the data on your report. FICO and VantageScore are the two scoring models you’ll see.

Lenders look at both. So should you.

Credit Score Range | Source: The College Investor

1. Get Your Annual Credit Report For Free

The single best resource for free credit reports is AnnualCreditReport.com. It’s the only website authorized by federal law to provide your free reports — every other site that promises a “free credit report” either charges a fee, requires a paid subscription, or sells your data.

Here’s what changed: under the original Fair Credit Reporting Act, you got one free report per bureau per year. During Covid, the bureaus voluntarily expanded that to one report per bureau per week. That weekly access was made permanent in September 2023. As of 2026, you can pull a fresh report from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion every seven days, free, with no catch.

Equifax is going one step further through 2026 — they’re offering six free reports per year directly through Equifax.com on top of the weekly access at AnnualCreditReport.com.

You’ll need to verify your identity with your Social Security number, date of birth, and a few security questions about old loan balances or addresses. If verification fails online, you can request reports by mail.

2. Get Your Free Credit Score From Credit Karma

Credit Karma is the easiest place to start for a free credit score. No credit card required, no trial period, no upsell to a paid plan. You get:

  • Two scores, updated weekly: TransUnion VantageScore 3.0 and Equifax VantageScore 3.0
  • Your full TransUnion and Equifax credit reports
  • Free monitoring with email alerts when something on your file changes
  • Tools to dispute errors directly through the platform

The trade-off: Credit Karma is ad-supported and will recommend credit cards and loans based on your profile. You can ignore those. The score and report data are real.

One caveat worth understanding: Credit Karma shows VantageScore 3.0, not FICO. Most lenders (about 90% of them) use a FICO score when they actually pull your credit. Your VantageScore on Credit Karma is a useful directional indicator — if it’s going up, your FICO is almost certainly going up too — but it’s not the exact number a lender will see. For your actual FICO score, see option 3.

3. Get A Free FICO Score From These Sources

Several issuers and services give you a free FICO score with no purchase or account ownership required:

  • Experian: free Experian credit report (updated daily) plus a free FICO Score 8 from Experian. No credit card needed.
  • Discover Credit Scorecard: free FICO Score 8 from TransUnion. You don’t have to be a Discover cardholder.
  • Capital One CreditWise: switched from VantageScore to FICO 8 from TransUnion in mid-2025. Free, no Capital One account needed.
  • Chase Credit Journey: free VantageScore 3.0 from Experian (note: this is VantageScore, not FICO). No Chase account needed to try Chase Credit Journey.
  • American Express MyCredit Guide: free FICO Score 8 from Experian. No Amex card needed. Check out Amex MyGuide here.

If you already carry a credit card, check your issuer’s app — Citi, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and most other major issuers now show a free monthly FICO score for cardholders.

Understanding The Information On Your Credit Report

Review the chart below to see how your credit score stacks up:

  • 600 or less: You have poor or bad credit, which will make it difficult to get a loan or buy a house. You can fix this by applying for a secured credit card to build your credit history
  • 600 – 700: You have average or fair credit. You will qualify for loans and credit cards, but on less favorable terms than someone with good credit
  • 700 – 779: YOu have good credit and will be eligible for most loans with favorable terms, as well as good credit card offers. Be sure to monitor your credit card accounts and avoid accumulating too much debt.
  • 780 or higher: You have excellent credit if you have a history of at least 5 years of making on time payments on a combination of credit cards, mortgage student loans, and car payments. You will get the best offers and loan rates.

Check Your Credit Report And Keep Records

Check your credit report each year from all three credit bureaus. Also, print and archive your credit report for your records. These reports will be especially useful if you need to dispute a report with a credit company or the bureau itself.

A mistake on your credit report could negatively impact your credit score, and it could go by unnoticed and then it will be more difficult to correct the mistake.

Know what all the information on your report means. Here is the most commonly found information on your reports:

Your Personal Information: Make sure your personal information is accuate. This includes: verifying your legal name(s), addresses, social security number, date of birth, and places of employment.

Review Your Credit Accounts and Payment History: These include mortgage accounts and home equity loans, revolving accounts (credit cards) and installment accounts where the among and term of payments are fixed, such as car or student loans. Each credit account will also indicate whether the accounts are open, closed or delinquent.

Credit inquiries: When you apply for a loan and authorize a lender to ask for your report, these inquiries are considered “hard inquiries”. If there are too many inquiries in a short period of time, these inquiries may negatively impact your credit score. Soft inquiries, such as preapproved credit offers, do not impact your credit score. 

Public Record And Collection Action: This includes bankruptcies, foreclosures, lawsuits, wage attachments, liens, judgements, and information on overdue debt from collection agencies.

Watch out For Identity Theft And Credit Fraud

Examine your report for signs of identity theft or credit fraud. The first thing to do with your credit report is review your report and make sure there is no inaccurate information. 

This will help to protect your credit score and to prevent identity theft. If you have damaged credit, you will be able to use the corrected information to fix your credit score. Make sure you check the following information:

  • Name or Names: There should be no names listed other than your own.
  • Address: Be sure the only addresses listed are places you have lived. If another address appears, it may be a sign of identity theft.
  • Credit Accounts: All of your present and past credit counts with information about late paymnets
  • Public Record Information: You will see a list of delinquent accounts, bankruptcies, lawsuits, wage garnishments, liens, judgements or foreclosures. This category is critical, so be sure everything is accurate.

Promptly Correct Inaccurate Information

If you find something wrong, file a dispute with the bureau that’s reporting it. You can do it free online at each bureau’s site:

The bureau has 30 days under the Fair Credit Reporting Act to investigate and respond. Keep documentation of anything you submit. If they refuse to remove the item and you still believe it’s wrong, file a complaint with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau at consumerfinance.gov.

Final Thoughts

Checking your credit report is free, takes about 10 minutes, and can save you from years of headaches. Set a calendar reminder every four months to pull one bureau (rotating through all three). Sign up for a free monitoring service so you get alerts when something changes. And if you’re not planning to apply for new credit soon, freeze your file.

What you don’t want is to find out about an error or fraud the day you’re trying to close on a house.

Have you gotten a free copy of your credit report yet? How will you use this information to reach your next big financial goal? Tell us in the comments below!

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