Our directory lists consumer protection attorneys who handle Fair Credit Reporting Act violations. Most work on contingency — you pay nothing unless they win. The FCRA requires the defendant to pay your attorney fees if you prevail.
Many consumer protection attorneys are licensed in multiple states and can handle cases remotely. Kazerouni Law Group is licensed in 9+ states; Resolve Law Group/Stuart Price is licensed in 22 states. If you don't see an attorney in your state, contact one of our national firms — they may be able to help. You can also search the NACA attorney directory for additional NACA-member consumer protection attorneys.
This directory is for informational purposes only. Listing does not constitute an endorsement or recommendation. All attorney-client relationships are formed independently between consumers and attorneys. Verify current licensure and case acceptance directly with each attorney before proceeding. NACA membership status may change — verify at consumeradvocates.org.
FCRA attorneys typically work on contingency — no upfront cost. The FCRA requires defendants to pay prevailing plaintiffs' attorney fees (§ 1681o, § 1681n). Confirm this arrangement before signing a retainer.
Ask how many FCRA cases the attorney has handled and whether they've successfully litigated against your specific defendant (Equifax, TransUnion, Experian, background check companies).
A good FCRA attorney will evaluate your dispute letters, credit reports, and any adverse action notices to estimate your damages range before committing to your case. This should be free.
Use the FCRA Damages Meter to identify every violation and calculate your potential recovery range. Then call an attorney with the numbers in hand.