⚖️ FCRA Consumer Protection — Georgia

Georgia Credit Reporting Violations & Your Rights

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.

$100–$1,000Per Willful Violation
+ PunitiveUnlimited Punitive Damages
$0Upfront Attorney Cost
Dual LawsFederal FCRA + GA State Law
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Dual Protection for Georgia Consumers

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.

Federal FCRA

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.

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Georgia Fair Business Practices Act

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.

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$0 Upfront Cost

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.

What FCRA Violations Affect Georgia Residents?

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Credit Bureau Errors Not Fixed

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.

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Background Check Violations

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.

Adverse Action Notice Failures

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.

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Unauthorized Credit Pulls

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.

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Identity Theft / Mixed Files

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.

Outdated Negative Information

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.

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Find a Consumer Rights Attorney in Georgia

These consumer protection attorneys handle FCRA cases and are licensed in GA or serve Georgia residents. Most work on contingency — no upfront cost.

Christopher E. Kittell

Kittell Law Firm

📍 Georgia (licensed)

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Rashad Blossom

Blossom Law PLLC

📍 Charlotte, NC (GA licensed)

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★ Sponsored

Bhanji Law Firm

FCRA & Consumer Protection Attorneys. Free case review, contingency fee only.

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View All GA Attorneys in Directory →

Georgia FCRA Statute of Limitations

⏰ Georgia FCRA Filing Deadline

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.

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Your Step-by-Step Process

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Document the Violation

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.

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Calculate Your Damages

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.

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Consult a Georgia 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.

Ready to Act? Get a Free Case Review

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.

Legal Disclaimer

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.

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