Module 3.3: Understanding the Three Credit Bureaus
Learn about Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. Why your reports differ and what each bureau does
The Three Credit Bureaus
There are three major credit reporting agencies in the United States: Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. They're called the "Big Three." Each bureau maintains separate databases of your credit information and reports. They don't share all the same data, which is why your credit reports can differ slightly between them.
Meet the Big Three
The largest credit bureau by volume. Equifax maintains credit files on over 800 million individual consumers worldwide and provides credit reports, risk scores, and other services.
A global information services company with the largest global presence. Experian maintains detailed credit information and offers unique credit-building products that other bureaus don't.
A major credit bureau providing credit reports, risk scores, and identity protection. TransUnion specializes in trend analytics and alternative credit data.
Bureau Comparison
| Feature | Equifax | Experian | TransUnion |
|---|---|---|---|
| Consumers Tracked | 800M+ globally | 245M+ in U.S. | 280M+ in U.S. |
| Year Founded | 1899 | 1980 | 1968 |
| Unique Feature | The Work Number (employment verification) | Experian Boost (add alternative payments) | Credit Vision (30-month trends) |
| Free Annual Report | Yes (AnnualCreditReport.com) | Yes (AnnualCreditReport.com) | Yes (AnnualCreditReport.com) |
| Credit Score Model | Equifax Risk Score 3.0 | Experian Score | TransUnion CreditVision Score |
| Monitoring Available | Yes (subscription) | Yes (subscription) | Yes (subscription) |
โ ๏ธ Why Your Reports Differ Between Bureaus
Creditors Report Selectively
A creditor might report to Equifax and TransUnion but NOT Experian. Or they might report to all three but with different information. This creates gaps in each bureau's database.
Timing Differences
Creditors send updates to bureaus on different schedules. Equifax might get your latest payment update while TransUnion hasn't received it yet. These timing gaps cause report variations.
Data Entry Errors
Mistakes happen. A creditor might report your account to Equifax as "active" but to TransUnion as "closed." These errors create discrepancies that need correction.
Identity Theft/Fraud
A fraudster might open accounts in your name and report to only one bureau. This shows up on one report but not the others. Always compare all three reports.
Account Closure Differences
When you close an account, bureaus handle it differently. One bureau might show it as closed while another still shows it as active. This affects your utilization ratio.
Collection Activity
A collection agency might report the debt to two bureaus but not the third. Or they might report the account status differently. This causes major variations between reports.
๐ What You Need to Know About the Bureaus
Different bureaus use different scoring models and have different data. A 750 on Equifax might be a 700 on Experian. All three scores are legitimate.
Credit card issuers might check Equifax. Auto lenders might check all three. Mortgage lenders typically check all three. You don't control which one they use.
Visit AnnualCreditReport.com to get all three reports free once yearly. Check each one for errors, fraud, and discrepancies. This is your legal right.
If you find a wrong late payment on Equifax, it might not be on Experian. You need to check all three and dispute each one separately if needed.
A lender might pull from Equifax only, leaving TransUnion and Experian unaffected. This is another reason why reports differ between bureaus.
Check your reports regularly for accounts you didn't open, unauthorized inquiries, or incorrect information. Identity theft can happen on just one bureau's report.
โ Your Action Checklist
๐ Key Takeaways
Three Separate Databases: Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion maintain independent databases. They don't share all the same data.
Your Reports Will Differ: Because of different creditor reporting, timing gaps, and data errors, your reports vary between bureaus. This is normal.
Your Scores Will Vary: Different bureaus use different scoring models. A 750 on one might be 700 on another. All three are legitimate.
Lenders Choose Which to Check: Some check one bureau, others check all three. You don't control which one they use.
Check All Three Annually: You get one free report per bureau per year. Use AnnualCreditReport.com and check all three for errors and fraud.
Dispute Each Bureau Separately: Errors need to be disputed with each bureau individually. Equifax disputes don't affect Experian or TransUnion.
