About 60-90 days.
As long as you are on the mortgage it will show on your credit report and effect you credit no matter if you are the primary, secondary or co-signer
This will stay on your credit indefinitely until it is paid. Once it is paid, it will show a zero balance, but your credit report will still show that you did have a judgment at one time. It will stay on the report for approximately 7 years.
Now, not too long. Check with the company you owed and see what credit agencies they report to and then contact the agencies directly.
A shortsale will report as Settled for Less than the Full Balance and will stay on your credit report for 7 years.
Your credit information may not show up when someone tries to access your report for several reasons. One possibility is that you have a credit freeze in place, which restricts access to your credit report. Additionally, if you have a limited credit history or have not established credit accounts, there may simply be insufficient data to generate a report. Finally, errors with the credit reporting agency could also prevent your information from being displayed.
It will show up on the credit reports for 10 years.
If you receive a judgement to evict non-paying tenants plus a judgement for rent monies unpaid and court costs how to do report this to the credit bureau if you do not have a SS# for the husband and wife? They are believed to have skipped the State when evicted.
You would know about it if you had been evicted.
Evictions, being a civil process, do not show up on one's "record." Being evicted is not a crime. Indeed, being evicted is not a statement of moral turpitude. Now the underlying reasons for not paying one's rent, or if the eviction is due to a violation of a criminal nature is a different issue. However, even honest, decent, law abiding people may be evicted through no fault of their own.
Probably not on a criminal record unless there was an arrest made for some reason in connection with it, but, there is no such criminal charge as "eviction.' However: If you were evicted because of unpaid rent, it might very well show up on your credit report as part of your credit history.
Absolutely. Many states have statutes that say exactly that the tenant must grant access.
I'm unsure.
Usually until the judgment is paid.
Not long at all. It should show up in your next statement or the one after it.
All inquiries stay on for 2 years
As long as you are on the mortgage it will show on your credit report and effect you credit no matter if you are the primary, secondary or co-signer
The judgment should be removed from your credit report 7 years from the date it was entered.