
Pulling up my credit report one afternoon, I expected to feel okay about it. I’d been pretty responsible — or so I thought. Then I saw it: two late payments sitting there like little red flags, both from an account I’d kind of forgotten about during a chaotic move two years prior. My stomach dropped. I hadn’t even realized I was late. The bills got forwarded to the wrong address, I set up autopay eventually, and somehow just… assumed it was fine. It was not fine.
Those two marks dropped my score by nearly 40 points. That’s not nothing. That’s the difference between qualifying for a decent car loan rate and getting stuck with a painful one. So I did what any slightly panicked person would do — I started researching everything I could about whether late payments can actually be removed from a credit report, or if you’re just stuck with them.
Here’s what I learned, and what actually worked for me.
Why Late Payments Hit So Hard
Before we get into removal strategies, let’s be real about what’s happening when a late payment shows up on your report. Payment history is the single most weighted factor in your credit score — it accounts for 35% of your total score, according to the CFPB. That means even one missed payment can tank your score fast.
According to Experian, a payment is typically reported as late once it’s 30 days past due. Your lender may charge you a late fee before that, but it generally won’t show up on your credit report until you cross that 30-day mark. Once reported, it can stay on your credit report for up to 7 years from the date of the original delinquency.
| Days Late | Impact on Credit Report |
|---|---|
| 1–29 days | Not reported to bureaus (but may incur late fee) |
| 30 days | First reportable late — significant score drop |
| 60 days | More serious damage |
| 90+ days | Severe damage; may trigger collections |
| Charged off | Stays 7 years from original delinquency date |
The frustrating part? Even if you pay the balance in full the next month, that late mark doesn’t just disappear. It stays on your report and keeps dragging your score down — unless you take steps to address it.
Can Late Payments Actually Be Removed?
Short answer: sometimes yes. Here are the three realistic paths people use.
Dispute It If It’s Inaccurate
This is the one you should always try first, and honestly, it’s the most powerful tool you have.
Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), you have the right to dispute any information on your credit report that is inaccurate, incomplete, or unverifiable. The credit bureaus — Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion — are legally required to investigate your dispute and respond within 30 days (sometimes 45 days in certain situations), according to the CFPB.
If the late payment was reported in error — wrong date, wrong account, creditor mistake — you can file a dispute and get it removed entirely. This happened to me with a different account. My lender had reported a payment as 30 days late, but when I looked at the dates, I had actually paid on day 28. I filed a dispute with all three bureaus, included documentation, and within three weeks it was gone.
How to dispute:
- Go directly to AnnualCreditReport.com to pull your free reports first
- File online at Equifax.com, Experian.com, or TransUnion.com
- Or write a dispute letter and send it certified mail
- Include supporting documents: bank statements, payment confirmations, account history
For a full walkthrough of this process, check out: How to Dispute Credit Report Errors
Write a Goodwill Letter
This is the route I had to take for my two legitimate late payments. A goodwill letter is exactly what it sounds like — you write to your creditor and ask them, as a goodwill gesture, to remove the late payment notation from your credit report.
It doesn’t always work. But it works often enough that it’s absolutely worth trying.
The key is tone and context. You’re not arguing that it was a mistake. You’re acknowledging it happened, explaining the circumstances (the move, the forwarding address issue, in my case), and politely asking them to consider removing it given your otherwise solid payment history with them.
What makes a goodwill letter more likely to succeed:
- You’ve been a long-term customer with a generally good payment record
- The late payment was an isolated incident, not a pattern
- You’ve paid the account in full (or caught it up immediately)
- You explain the specific reason it happened (medical emergency, job loss, move, etc.)
Send it to the original creditor — not the credit bureau. The bureau just reports what the creditor tells them. The power to remove it lies with the lender.
Goodwill Letter Template (simplified):
Dear [Creditor Name] Customer Service Team,
I’m writing regarding account number XXXX. I have been a customer since [year] and have otherwise maintained a consistent payment history. On [date], a payment was reported late due to [brief, honest explanation]. This was an isolated situation and does not reflect my usual financial habits.
I would like to respectfully request that you consider removing the late payment notation from my credit report as a goodwill adjustment. I value my relationship with [Creditor Name] and am committed to maintaining a positive account standing going forward.
Thank you sincerely for considering my request.
Send it via certified mail and keep copies of everything. If you don’t hear back in 2–3 weeks, follow up. I sent two letters before I got a response — the second one was via email directly to their customer service and got a faster reply.
Wait It Out — Strategically
Sometimes neither of the above works. You disputed it, the creditor verified it as accurate, and your goodwill letter got a polite “no.” That stings. But it’s not the end.
Here’s the thing: late payments lose their impact on your score over time. According to Experian, older negative items carry less weight than recent ones. A late payment from six years ago is doing far less damage than one from six months ago. And after 7 years from the original delinquency date, it must be removed from your credit report entirely, per the FCRA.
In the meantime, the best thing you can do is:
- Never miss another payment — set up autopay for at least the minimum amount
- Lower your credit utilization — keep balances below 30% of your limit
- Keep your older accounts open — they help your credit age
- Add positive accounts — a new secured card used responsibly can help rebuild
If you’re in a bad spot and want a faster path to rebuilding, read: How to Fix Bad Credit Fast
What Does NOT Work (Please Don’t Fall for These)
While I was researching this, I came across some advice that was either outdated, misleading, or an outright scam. Let me save you the headache.
| Myth | Reality |
|---|---|
| “Pay-for-delete” is a reliable strategy | Some creditors agree to this, many don’t — and it’s technically against bureau policies. Proceed with extreme caution. |
| Credit repair companies can do things you can’t | Legally, no. They dispute on your behalf, but you can do exactly the same for free. |
| Disputing accurate info will always make it disappear | Bureaus can “verify” and keep it on your report if the creditor confirms it. |
| Closing the account removes the late payment | Nope. The history stays on your report regardless of account status. |
| Settling a debt removes the late payment | Settlement shows as “settled,” which is better than “charged off” but still negative. |
The CFPB explicitly warns consumers about for-profit credit repair scams that promise to remove accurate information. If something sounds too easy, it probably is.
Timeline: What to Realistically Expect
One thing I wish someone had told me earlier: this process takes time. Even when it works.
| Action | Typical Timeframe |
|---|---|
| File a dispute online | 30–45 days for investigation |
| Send a goodwill letter | 2–6 weeks for a response |
| Credit score update after removal | 1–2 billing cycles |
| Natural aging of late payment | Ongoing — 7 years to full removal |
Don’t panic if you don’t see immediate score movement. Once a negative item is removed or updated, your score can take a full billing cycle or two to reflect the change.
A Note on Timing: When Your Credit Score Matters Most
If you have a major financial goal coming up — buying a car, renting an apartment, applying for a mortgage — it’s worth starting this process as early as possible. Even getting one or two late payments removed can meaningfully shift your score, and the difference between a 670 and a 710 can translate to real dollars saved on interest rates.
For more on what a good credit score actually opens up for you, see: How to Improve Your Credit Score in 2026
My Final Takeaways
Here’s what I’d tell my past self, standing there staring at those two red flags on my credit report:
- Dispute first — always check for inaccuracies before assuming you’re stuck with it
- Write a goodwill letter — it’s worth the time, even if the odds aren’t guaranteed
- Don’t fall for scams — you have all the legal tools already, for free
- Keep building positive history — it slowly outweighs the negative over time
Those two late payments I had? One was successfully removed after a goodwill letter (it took three weeks and one follow-up email). The other one stayed. It’s still there. But it’s older now, it matters less, and my score has climbed back up steadily because I made sure everything after that point was spotless.
You can recover from this. It just takes a little strategy and a lot of patience.
Sources: Experian — “How Long Do Late Payments Stay on Your Credit Report?”; CFPB — Fair Credit Reporting Act Consumer Guide; Equifax — “How Late Payments Affect Your Credit Score”
About the Author Soo Kim is the founder of Smart Credit Journey, a personal finance blog dedicated to helping everyday Americans navigate the U.S. credit system with confidence. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice.