Affirm Charge-Off Showing Twice on Credit Report: How to fix?

by Joe Mahlow • Updated on Mar. 29, 2026
A charge-off is already damaging.
But when the same Affirm charge off account shows up twice on your credit report, the impact can be significantly worse.
Here’s why this matters:
Credit scoring models don’t always recognize duplicate negative entries immediately. So instead of one derogatory mark, your profile may be absorbing the effect of two—lowering your score, increasing your risk profile, and making approvals harder.
In many cases, this isn’t just bad luck.
It’s a reporting error.
Duplicate charge-offs can happen when:
- A debt is transferred or sold between lenders
- The same account is reported by multiple furnishers
- Data is misreported across credit bureaus
The good news?
This type of issue is often fixable, and in some cases, completely removable.
In this guide, you’ll learn exactly:
- Why an Affirm charge-off may appear twice
- How it affects your credit score
- The step-by-step dispute process to correct it
- What to do if the bureaus don’t fix it
Because when it comes to your credit report, accuracy isn’t optional. It’s legally required.
Affirm Charge-Off · Duplicate Credit Report Entry · FCRA Dispute · TrueAccord · Experian TransUnion
Affirm showing twice on your credit report is not a glitch you have to live with. It is a specific, documented FCRA problem with a specific fix. This guide tells you exactly what caused it, how to confirm it, and the step-by-step process to get one or both entries removed.
Updated March 2026 · Sources: FCRA Section 611, Section 623(a)(5), FDCPA 15 U.S.C. 1692g, myFICO Forums, Affirm.com NMLS disclosure, CFPB consumer complaint data
- Affirm reports to Experian and TransUnion only. It does not report to Equifax. If Affirm appears on your Equifax report, that is a separate problem requiring immediate investigation.
- The most common cause of a double entry is duplicate tradeline reporting: Affirm's original charge-off entry plus a TrueAccord (or Affirm-branded) collection entry for the same underlying debt.
- Under FCRA Section 611, a bureau must investigate a specific, documented dispute within 30 days. A duplicate entry is a clear inaccuracy and among the strongest possible dispute grounds.
- The second most common cause is a re-aged delinquency date on the collection entry, which makes the same debt appear as a newer, more recent account. This is an FCRA Section 623(a)(5) violation.
- The fix is sequential: diagnose which of the three causes applies, target the correct entry for dispute, file with both Experian and TransUnion simultaneously, and send an FDCPA debt validation letter to TrueAccord at the same time.
- Paying the Affirm balance alone does not remove either entry. Payment only updates the status to "paid." Removal requires a dispute, a successful debt validation failure, or a negotiated pay-for-delete agreement before payment.
Why Affirm Appears Twice: The Three Causes
Before you dispute anything, you need to know which of the three scenarios is causing the double entry. Each one has a different dispute strategy.
| Cause | What You See on the Report | How to Confirm | Dispute Success Probability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duplicate tradelineMost common cause | Two entries: one labeled "Affirm Inc." as charge-off, one labeled "TrueAccord" or "Affirm" as collection. Same original account number or same loan amount. | Check if both entries have the same account number, the same original loan amount, and the same date of first delinquency. If yes, one is a duplicate. | High: FCRA violation, strong grounds |
| Re-aged delinquency dateSecond most common | Two entries, each with a different date of first delinquency, making one appear older and one newer. The newer one (collection entry) appears to be a different, more recent debt. | Compare the date of first delinquency on both entries. If the collection entry has a later date than the original Affirm charge-off, the collection entry has been re-aged illegally. | High: FCRA Section 623(a)(5) violation |
| Multiple separate Affirm loansNot a FCRA violation, but still addressable | Two entries with different account numbers, different loan amounts, and different dates. Each was a separate Affirm installment loan from a different purchase. | Cross-reference your Affirm account history. If you took out two separate loans (e.g., two different purchases financed through Affirm) and both defaulted, each loan generates its own tradeline. | Medium: Each entry must have individual errors to dispute |
What the Duplicate Looks Like on Your Report
Here is the exact side-by-side entry pattern that makes this confusing. Both entries look like negative marks. Both list Affirm-related information. But only one should be on your report.
How to Fix a Duplicate Affirm Entry: Step by Step
This is the sequence. Do not skip steps and do not do them out of order.
Go to AnnualCreditReport.com and download both reports. Do not rely on a credit monitoring app score summary -- you need the full tradeline data. For every Affirm-related entry on each report, write down: the creditor name listed, the account number, the account type, the original balance, the current reported balance, the account status, and -- most critically -- the Date of First Delinquency (DOFD).
If the same underlying loan appears twice, you will see it in the account numbers. Affirm loan account numbers are specific to the individual purchase. TrueAccord may assign a different collector reference number, but the original creditor information and the original loan amount will match if both entries are for the same debt.
Screenshot or print each entry. You are building a documentation file, not just checking a score.Use the diagnosis table above. If the two entries have the same original balance and the same or very similar loan period, you are looking at a duplicate. If the dates of first delinquency are different between the two entries, the newer entry has been re-aged. If the original balances are different and the dates are different, you may have two separate Affirm loans both in default, which is a different problem requiring individual dispute analysis on each entry.
The most actionable scenario -- and the most common -- is duplicate with re-aging. That gives you two independent dispute grounds on the same secondary entry: the duplication itself (FCRA Section 611) and the inaccurate delinquency date (FCRA Section 623(a)(5)).
FCRA Section 611: Right to dispute any inaccurate information. Section 623(a)(5): Prohibition on reporting re-aged delinquency dates.If TrueAccord is the second reporting entity, send them a written FDCPA debt validation request before you file your bureau disputes. TrueAccord communicates primarily by email, so you may have documentation of their first contact date. Under the FDCPA, you have 30 days from first contact to request validation. Send by USPS Certified Mail with Return Receipt to TrueAccord Corp, 16011 College Blvd, Suite 130, Lenexa, KS 66219.
In the letter, request: confirmation of the original creditor (Affirm Inc.), the original account number, the original balance, the date of first delinquency, complete documentation that TrueAccord has the right to collect, and an itemized breakdown of the claimed balance. Debt buyers who purchase portfolio accounts frequently cannot produce account-level documentation for individual loans. When they cannot validate, they must stop all collection activity -- including credit bureau reporting. This is the fastest, cheapest path to removing a TrueAccord entry.
Keep your certified mail tracking number and the green return receipt card. They are your proof the letter was received and your FDCPA clock start date if TrueAccord fails to respond properly.File with both bureaus on the same day. Experian: dispute.experian.com. TransUnion: dispute.transunion.com. Also send by certified mail to both bureaus for documentation purposes. The bureau has 30 days to investigate from the date they receive a complete dispute (45 days if you attach supporting documentation).
Your dispute must be specific. Do not say "I don't recognize this account." Say exactly what is wrong and cite the FCRA section it violates. For a duplicate entry, say: "The entry reported under [collector name / account number X] for an Affirm Inc. loan is a duplicate of the existing entry under account number Y. Both entries report the same underlying Affirm loan originated in [month/year] for $[amount]. Reporting a single debt twice constitutes inaccurate credit reporting under FCRA Section 611. I request that the duplicate entry be removed."
For a re-aged delinquency date, say: "The date of first delinquency reported on this entry is [date]. The original Affirm charge-off entry for the same account reports a date of first delinquency of [earlier date], which is the accurate date of the first missed payment. Reporting a later date of first delinquency than the actual original delinquency date violates FCRA Section 623(a)(5). I request correction of the date of first delinquency and, if the entry is from a subsequent collector or debt buyer, removal of the duplicate tradeline."
Bureau must acknowledge dispute within 5 days and complete investigation within 30 days of receiving it (45 days with documentation).Under FCRA Section 623(a)(8), you can dispute directly with the furnisher who reported the entry -- Affirm Inc. -- separately from your bureau disputes. Affirm's furnisher dispute address is Affirm, Inc., 650 California Street, 12th Floor, San Francisco, CA 94108. Send by certified mail.
Reference the specific account number, the inaccuracy you are disputing, and the FCRA section violated. Affirm must conduct a reasonable investigation and correct any information it finds inaccurate. A furnisher who confirms inaccurate information without a reasonable investigation is exposed to FCRA liability under Section 1681n (willful) or 1681o (negligent). Running bureau disputes and a furnisher dispute simultaneously creates two parallel investigation tracks. If the bureau returns "verified" but the furnisher's own investigation produces different results, you have the basis for escalation.
Keep a copy of everything you send to Affirm with the certified mail receipt. This documentation trail is essential if you need to file a CFPB complaint or consult a consumer law attorney."Verified" means the bureau contacted Affirm or TrueAccord and they confirmed the information. It does not mean the information is accurate. It means they said it was. When a furnisher verifies information that you can prove is inaccurate -- particularly a re-aged delinquency date that you can document against the original Affirm loan records -- the furnisher may be verifying inaccurate data without conducting the reasonable investigation the FCRA requires.
File a complaint at consumerfinance.gov. The CFPB complaint triggers a mandatory creditor response within 15 days for most complaint types. Consumer law attorneys who specialize in FCRA violations often take these cases on contingency, meaning no upfront cost to you. Under FCRA Sections 1681n and 1681o, successful FCRA cases entitle you to statutory damages of up to $1,000, actual damages, and attorney fees. The existence of a documented re-aging violation is precisely the type of provable, specific FCRA error that produces these outcomes.
Not Sure Which Cause Applies to Your Affirm Entries? A Free Audit Diagnoses It Specifically.
Duplicate tradeline, re-aged date, or two separate loans -- each has a different dispute strategy. Getting the wrong strategy on the wrong entry wastes your 30-day investigation window. A free credit audit identifies exactly which entries are on your Experian and TransUnion reports, which cause applies, and which specific FCRA sections your dispute should cite.
The Dispute Letter for a Duplicate Affirm Entry
Here is the exact language. Generic disputes fail. Specific disputes with cited FCRA sections succeed at a meaningfully higher rate.
What Each Action Produces: Expected Outcomes
| Action | Target | Expected timeline | Best case outcome | If it fails |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FDCPA debt validation to TrueAccord | TrueAccord collection entry | 30 days from receipt | Collection entry removed if TrueAccord cannot validate with complete documentation | TrueAccord validates and continues reporting. Move to Step 4 (bureau dispute). |
| Bureau dispute: duplicate tradeline | Duplicate entry on Experian and TransUnion | 30 days from receipt | Duplicate entry removed from both reports | "Verified" result returned. Escalate to furnisher dispute and CFPB complaint. |
| Bureau dispute: re-aged delinquency date | Collection entry with wrong DOFD | 30 days from receipt | DOFD corrected to accurate earlier date, shortening the 7-year damage window | "Verified." File direct furnisher dispute under FCRA 623(a)(8) and CFPB complaint. |
| Direct furnisher dispute to Affirm (FCRA 623(a)(8)) | Affirm as the reporting furnisher | 30 days reasonable investigation | Affirm corrects or removes inaccurate entry | Affirm verifies without reasonable investigation. Grounds for FCRA litigation. |
| CFPB complaint filed | Affirm Inc. / TrueAccord | 15 days mandatory response | Servicer often corrects issue to close complaint | Complaint closed without resolution. Consider consumer law attorney consultation. |
| Pay-for-delete negotiation (if debt is valid and undisputed) | Affirm or TrueAccord | 1 to 4 weeks for agreement; 30 days post-payment for bureau update | Written deletion agreement from TrueAccord (not guaranteed from Affirm directly) | Affirm states they only update to "paid" status. TrueAccord may have different authority. Ask both. |
| Paying without any prior agreement | Balance only | Immediate payment | Status updates to "paid charge-off." Entries remain on report for full 7-year window. | This is the worst possible sequence. Do not pay without a written deletion agreement or completed FCRA dispute first. |
The Specific Affirm Reporting Facts That Change Your Strategy
Not every debt collector behaves the same way. Affirm's specific setup creates specific problems and specific leverage points.
Affirm Does Not Report to Equifax
Affirm reports only to Experian and TransUnion. If you see an Affirm-related entry on your Equifax report, that is not a standard Affirm reporting. It is either a mixed-file error (someone else's Affirm account was incorrectly attached to your file) or identity theft. Both warrant a direct Equifax dispute with an ID theft affidavit attached.
TrueAccord Communicates by Email, Not Phone
Most collection agencies make their first contact by phone. TrueAccord makes first contact by email. This means many consumers classify TrueAccord emails as spam and miss the 30-day FDCPA debt validation window entirely. If you received any email from TrueAccord about an Affirm balance, check the date of that first email. That is your FDCPA clock start date. If it was within the last 30 days, you can still send a validation letter and trigger the mandatory stop on collection activity.
Affirm Has Stated in Writing It Does Not Do Pay-for-Delete
Multiple myFICO forum users report receiving direct written responses from Affirm stating that they do not remove charge-off entries from credit reports, only update them to "paid" status upon settlement. This is Affirm's stated policy as of mid-2025. It does not mean TrueAccord has the same restriction -- TrueAccord as a separate company may have independent authority to request deletion upon settlement. When negotiating payment, direct the pay-for-delete request specifically to TrueAccord and ask explicitly whether they have the authority to submit a deletion request to Experian and TransUnion.
Affirm's Bank Partners Are the Legal Lenders
When you borrowed through Affirm, the actual legal lender on your loan documents was Cross River Bank, Celtic Bank, or another FDIC-member bank that Affirm uses for loan origination. Affirm Inc. (NMLS ID 1883087) is the servicer, not always the creditor of record. This matters for your dispute letters because the creditor of record on your credit report determines who the furnisher is. In most cases, Affirm Inc. is the reporting furnisher regardless of which bank originated the loan, but confirm the creditor name on your actual credit report entry before addressing your dispute letters.
Two Affirm Entries Means Two Sources of Score Damage. The Fix Requires Getting the Strategy Right the First Time.
A vague dispute gets a "verified" result and wastes your 30-day investigation window. A specific, documented dispute citing the correct FCRA section for the correct entry type gets investigated properly. A free audit tells you which entry is the duplicate, whether the delinquency date has been re-aged, and exactly what the dispute letter should say before you file anything.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is Affirm showing twice on my credit report?
Three possible causes: a duplicate tradeline where both Affirm's original charge-off and a TrueAccord (or second Affirm) collection entry report the same underlying debt; a re-aged delinquency date where the collection entry shows a later DOFD than the original entry, making it appear to be a different account; or two genuinely separate Affirm loans that both defaulted and each generates its own tradeline. The first two scenarios are FCRA violations. Confirm which applies by comparing account numbers, original balances, and dates of first delinquency between both entries.
Can I dispute a duplicate Affirm charge-off on my credit report?
Yes. File specific disputes with Experian and TransUnion citing FCRA Section 611, naming both account numbers, stating that both entries report the same underlying Affirm loan, and attaching a copy of your credit report with both entries highlighted. The bureau must investigate within 30 days. A duplicate entry is one of the strongest possible dispute grounds because it is factually verifiable and constitutes clear inaccuracy under the FCRA.
Does TrueAccord add a separate entry to my credit report?
TrueAccord typically does not add a separate collection tradeline the way most debt buyers do. In most documented cases, the original Affirm charge-off entry remains as the only entry. However, in some Experian reports, both an Affirm entry and a TrueAccord or second Affirm-labeled collection entry appear simultaneously for the same loan. When this occurs, the duplicate is disputable. Send TrueAccord a debt validation letter simultaneously with your bureau disputes, since their inability to provide complete documentation provides an independent path to removing their entry.
Does paying Affirm remove the duplicate entries?
No. Paying Affirm updates the account status to "paid charge-off" but does not remove either entry from your report. Affirm has stated in writing to multiple users that their policy is not to remove charge-off entries, only to update the status upon payment. To remove either entry, you need a successful FCRA dispute or a negotiated pay-for-delete agreement obtained before payment. TrueAccord may have more flexibility on pay-for-delete than Affirm directly.
What is a re-aged delinquency date and how does it hurt me?
A re-aged delinquency date is when a collection entry reports a date of first delinquency that is later than the actual original missed payment date. Under FCRA Section 623(a)(5), furnishers must report the original delinquency date, not the date the debt was purchased or transferred. A re-aged date makes the 7-year FCRA reporting clock start later than it should, keeping the negative entry on your report longer than the law allows. If Affirm's original charge-off shows March 2022 as the DOFD but the TrueAccord entry shows August 2022, the August date is re-aged and disputable.
What if the bureau returns "verified" on my Affirm duplicate dispute?
Escalate. A "verified" result means the bureau contacted Affirm or TrueAccord and they confirmed the information. It does not mean the information is accurate. File a direct furnisher dispute with Affirm under FCRA Section 623(a)(8), which requires Affirm to conduct its own independent investigation. If Affirm verifies inaccurate information without a reasonable investigation, file a CFPB complaint at consumerfinance.gov. A documented re-aging violation where you have the original loan records showing the correct earlier date is exactly the type of provable, specific FCRA violation that consumer law attorneys take on contingency.
Does Affirm report to all three credit bureaus?
No. Affirm reports to Experian and TransUnion only. It does not report to Equifax as of March 2026. As of mid-2025, Affirm expanded its reporting to include TransUnion in addition to Experian, which caught some borrowers off guard when Affirm tradelines appeared on TransUnion for the first time. If any Affirm-related entry appears on your Equifax report, investigate it immediately as a potential mixed-file error or identity theft rather than standard Affirm reporting.
Related Reads and Sources
- Affirm Inc: Who Are They and How to Deal With Charge-Offs — The comprehensive Affirm guide covering the company profile, NMLS registration, bank partners, TrueAccord's collection process, all PAA questions answered, and the dispute strategy for a single Affirm entry before the duplicate issue arises.
- How to Delete Charge-Offs from Your Credit Report — The full FCRA error audit checklist for charge-off entries including the seven most common disputable errors, the step-by-step dispute process, and the pay-for-delete negotiation script for any charge-off entry including Affirm.
- I Paid My Collection and My Score Didn't Change — The FICO 8 mechanics explaining why paying Affirm or TrueAccord without a deletion agreement produces no score improvement, and what options remain after payment has already been made.
- CFPB: How to Dispute a Credit Report Error — Official federal guidance on the 30-day investigation window, what happens when a dispute returns "verified," how to escalate to the CFPB directly, and the documentation requirements for a successful dispute.
- Experian: What Affects Your Credit Score — Bureau-level explanation of how FICO 8 weights different account types including charge-offs and collection accounts, and why duplicate entries from the same underlying debt compound score damage beyond what a single entry causes.
- FTC: Disputing Errors on Your Credit Reports — Federal Trade Commission guidance on consumer rights under the FCRA, how to dispute errors directly with bureaus for free, and how to identify when a furnisher's "verified" result may warrant legal escalation.