purplegirl247
<font color=purple>I joined for reason A<br><font
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2006
- Messages
- 970
Hi, all. I was going to try to google this, but for the life of me I can't figure out how to phrase it, so thought maybe you guys could help me out. 
Over the past week, both my husband and I have received separate letters from Experian, Equifax, and Trans Union, stating that we recently requested credit reports from them, and the letter was just to confirm that we had indeed requested it. Except that we have not. We aren't even doing anything that would involve our credit report (we use creditkarma.com on a monthly basis to estimate our scores, but we've been using them for a year now and have never had anything like this come up).
Credit bureaus, of course, are notoriously hard to get ahold of (the letters only give P.O. boxes, no phone numbers or e-mail addys). Do you think I should be alarmed, or is it possibly a marketing technique (in I think 2 of the 3, we've already gotten our free credit report for the year, so we'd have to pay if we wanted another report)? I was initially freaked out and ready to send off alarmed letters, letting them know we didn't request anything, but now I'm wondering if I'm overreacting.
Thoughts? Thanks in advance!

Over the past week, both my husband and I have received separate letters from Experian, Equifax, and Trans Union, stating that we recently requested credit reports from them, and the letter was just to confirm that we had indeed requested it. Except that we have not. We aren't even doing anything that would involve our credit report (we use creditkarma.com on a monthly basis to estimate our scores, but we've been using them for a year now and have never had anything like this come up).
Credit bureaus, of course, are notoriously hard to get ahold of (the letters only give P.O. boxes, no phone numbers or e-mail addys). Do you think I should be alarmed, or is it possibly a marketing technique (in I think 2 of the 3, we've already gotten our free credit report for the year, so we'd have to pay if we wanted another report)? I was initially freaked out and ready to send off alarmed letters, letting them know we didn't request anything, but now I'm wondering if I'm overreacting.
Thoughts? Thanks in advance!
