Georgia residents have both federal FCRA protections and additional state-law remedies. If a credit bureau or background check company violated your rights, you may be owed $100–$1,000 per willful violation — plus attorney fees paid by the defendant.
Georgia's Fair Business Practices Act provides additional consumer remedies, including the right to bring a class action and recover attorney fees. Combined with federal FCRA claims, Georgia consumers may have powerful parallel causes of action.
15 U.S.C. §§ 1681–1681x. Statutory damages of $100–$1,000 per willful violation, plus unlimited punitive damages and mandatory attorney fee shifting. Applies to all 50 states.
Georgia's Fair Business Practices Act provides additional consumer remedies, including the right to bring a class action and recover attorney fees. Combined with federal FCRA claims, Georgia consumers may have powerful parallel causes of action.
FCRA attorneys work on contingency — you pay nothing unless they win. Under § 1681n, the defendant pays your attorney fees if you prevail. Georgia consumers can pursue both federal and state claims simultaneously.
Equifax, TransUnion, and Experian must investigate disputes within 30 days (§ 1681i). When they fail to do so for Georgia residents, that is a potential FCRA violation worth $100–$1,000.
Georgia employers frequently use background check companies (HireRight, Sterling, Checkr). Failure to provide a pre-adverse action notice before an adverse employment decision is a common FCRA violation in Georgia.
Lenders, landlords, and employers in Georgia must provide adverse action notices when denying credit, housing, or employment based on a consumer report. Omitting this notice is a separate FCRA violation.
Pulling a consumer’s credit report without a permissible purpose under § 1681b is a federal violation. Georgia consumers who discover unauthorized inquiries may have a claim for $100–$1,000 per pull.
Credit bureaus that mix up consumer files or fail to block fraudulent accounts after an identity theft report may be liable for multiple FCRA violations. This is a growing issue in high-population states like Georgia.
Negative credit information generally must be removed after 7 years (10 years for bankruptcy). Reporting outdated information past these limits is a § 1681c violation that can support a lawsuit.
These consumer protection attorneys handle FCRA cases and are licensed in GA or serve Georgia residents. Most work on contingency — no upfront cost.
FCRA & Consumer Protection Attorneys. Free case review, contingency fee only.
Get Free Case Review →Under 15 U.S.C. § 1681p, Georgia consumers must file their FCRA lawsuit within 2 years of discovering the violation — or 5 years from when the violation occurred, whichever is earlier. Some GA state law claims may carry different limitation periods — consult an attorney to confirm both deadlines apply to your situation.
Pull your credit reports at AnnualCreditReport.com. Save dispute letters, adverse action notices, and background check reports. The more you document, the stronger your case.
Use the FCRA Damages Meter to tally every violation and estimate your $100–$1,000 per-violation range. Know your numbers before you call an attorney.
Contact a consumer protection attorney licensed in GA. Most take FCRA cases on contingency — free consultation, pay only if they win. The defendant pays attorney fees if you prevail.
Georgia consumers can pursue both federal FCRA claims and GA state law claims simultaneously. A consumer protection attorney can evaluate your situation for free — no upfront cost, contingency fee only.
This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. FCRA rights apply to all US residents; GA state law adds additional remedies. Consult a licensed Georgia consumer protection attorney for advice specific to your situation. Statutory damage amounts are per-violation ranges set by Congress and do not guarantee any particular outcome.