meagen
cameron,#2UPDATE Employee
Thu, March 29, 2012
I have a friend that works for freecreditreport.com and I really get sick of people saying bad stuff about it. so here is something to think about.
1. they do charge 1 to see your experian credit report. The 31.95 is for all 3 reports and scores.
2. It states in the terms and conditions that you will be automatically put in the paid membershit if you dont cancel in 7 days. Your sent an email on day 5 with the number to cancel.
3. the customer service is open 8am-10pm easter time 5 days a week 10-8 on the weekends.
4.Yes, when you call they do try to get you to stay with the membership because its is helpful they dont only give you the report and scores they also monitor your credit day to day for changes and notify you my email/text standard text fee do apply.
5.If you call in and are nice and say sorry I forgot most likley you can get a refund if you call are nasty your not going to get it.
6. The company understands that stuff happens sometimes but you agreed to pay if you forgot so really they dont have to provide a refund
and last but not least
7. READ THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS BEFORE YOU ACCEPT THEM ITS ALL IN THERE IN PERFECT ENGLISH.
so in conclusion to everyone that feels they have been ripped off they didnt rip you off you just didnt read what was right in from of you and got click happy. Sorry that you was charged 31.95 because you got click happy they have to eat the money it cost to provide the reports and scores.
John-IR
United States of America#3Consumer Comment
Wed, February 22, 2012
I used freecreditreport.com for all of 9 hours, even though I was only able to find my credit score, which I wanted, the only crime committed was the lack of user friendly interface on the site itself. My experience went like this:
I set up an account in 5 minuets on their site, when doing so I could clearly read something similar to "7-day trial, you will be billed $15.00 dollars and its non-refundable if you forget to cancel", in 15pt font.
I bit the bullet and decided to cancel in the morning anyways...
I got my information, they charged me two times, once for $1.00 and again for $29.95, these fees were because I clicked on a link to read all three of my reports, which they do not offer for free and they told me the charges. I however did not click on submit, I instead hit the back button before I thought they would charge me.
This morning I called them, I was connected immediately with a person from customer service who not only refunded both transactions but also cancelled my account in all of six minutes.
I understand other people may have different experiences but mine was flawless and I would do business with them if it were not for the expensive price.
Southern Chemical and Equipment LLC
Sarasota,#4Consumer Suggestion
Tue, February 07, 2012
Nowadays, you really have to pay close attention to anything that requires the input of your credit card number, especially "free" offers.
Common sense would tell you to ask yourself one question when you encounter a "free" offer. That would be: "How much is "free" going to cost me"?
Common sense would also tell you that businesses cannot survive if they are giving things away for free.
The ONLY online source to get your free credit report that is required by law once per year is at:
www.annualcreditreport.com
Also note that the free credit report does NOT contain your credit score. If you want your score, you must pay for it.
And, the terms of that free credit report offer are very clear right there on the enrollment page, and again when you actually press the "submit button. Then, you get a confirmation email which also spells it out for you.
So, in reality, all you have to do is pay attention, and mark the free trial end date on your calendar if you think you may not remember it.
It really is fairly simple.