Credit Report Center™
Understanding your credit reports is one of the first steps in getting organized.
JustiPal™ does not access, pull, or store your credit report. All information is educational.
JustiPal™ does not access, pull, or store your credit report. All information on this page is educational only and does not constitute legal advice.
Why Your Credit Report Matters in Bankruptcy
Your credit report is essentially a list of everyone you currently owe money to — creditors, account numbers, current balances, and the status of each account. This information is critical when preparing for bankruptcy.
When you file for bankruptcy, you are required to list all of your creditors — even if you haven't received a recent statement. Your credit reports help ensure that no creditor is accidentally left out.
- Identifies every creditor you owe
- Shows account numbers needed for paperwork
- Reveals current balance on each account
- Highlights accounts you may have forgotten
- Helps ensure your filing is complete and accurate
This is educational information only — not legal advice. Your specific situation may differ.
Which Reports to Pull
There are three major credit bureaus in the United States, and each one may have different information about your accounts:
Equifax
Experian
TransUnion
Because each bureau may report different creditors, it's important to pull all three reports. A creditor that appears on one report may not appear on another.
Free Official Access
By federal law, you are entitled to one free credit report per bureau per year through the official government-mandated source:
AnnualCreditReport.comJustiPal™ does not pull credit reports on your behalf. This is educational guidance only.
How to Read Your Report for Bankruptcy Purposes
Once you have your reports, focus on a few key pieces of information for each account listed:
Creditor Name
The name of the company you owe — bank, credit union, hospital, utility, etc.
Account Number
You'll need this for certain paperwork. It's often partially masked on your report.
Current Balance
The amount currently owed. This may differ slightly from your last statement.
Account Status
Open, closed, charged-off, in collections — all statuses matter.
⚠️ Important: Don't overlook closed accounts
An account can be “closed” but still carry a balance. Closed accounts with remaining balances are still debts that may need to be addressed.
✏️ Tip: Create a simple list
As you go through each report, write down or screenshot every creditor that has a balance — even a small one. This becomes your master creditor list.
Organizing What You Find
Once you've pulled all three reports and identified your creditors, the next step is getting everything organized in one place.
You'll want to have, for each creditor:
- Creditor name and contact info
- Account number
- Current balance
- Type of debt (credit card, medical, personal loan, etc.)
- Account status
Ready to organize your creditor information?
Once you have your reports, use JustiPal™ to organize your creditor information in one secure place.
Start Organizing with JustiPal™ →JustiPal™ does not access, pull, or store your credit report. All information is educational only and does not constitute legal advice.
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