Update: In 2018, a federal law was enacted that allows consumers to freeze and unfreeze their credit at the three major bureaus free of charge1.
Ok, I admit it. I’ve been lazy about taking my own advice.
I know that the best way to protect myself against identity theft and credit fraud is to freeze my credit. Especially after the massive Equifax breach last month, protecting ourselves is more important than ever.
I’ve read countless news articles about it. I’ve told countless clients to do it. Our firm has put out at least a few pieces on the topic. Our financial planners Ashley and Marcie remind me regularly, but I haven’t done it myself.
Why is that? Why haven’t I taken the steps to protect myself? It’s not that I’m concerned about having to unfreeze it if I need credit sometime. I’m at the point in my life where I don’t need more credit very often. No more credit cards in the foreseeable future, I don’t lease a car or have a car loan, and I don’t expect to need a new mortgage. Even if I someday do need some type of credit, it surely won’t be more than about once a year, so the act of unfreezing and re-freezing shouldn’t be a big deal.
After lots of self-reflection, the best I can come up with is that it just seems a little cumbersome to go through the process. Having to deal with three separate companies. Waiting on hold. Stories about people giving up after hitting a roadblock. And of course, more login credentials to remember.
But tonight, I decided to take the plunge and see what the process is all about.
My first bit of advice is: don’t call. Do it online; it’s really quite simple and only mildly annoying. If you’ve already frozen yours, congratulations, and you can stop reading now.
If you’re like me and haven’t yet gotten around to it, here is a rundown of my experience with each credit bureau.
EXPERIAN
https://www.experian.com/freeze
Very easy process. Asks basic questions, such as name, address, social security number and date of birth. Also asks some unique multiple choice questions that only you would know, like when you took out an auto loan, who has (or has not) lived with you, and a recent phone number. And I got to pick my own PIN, which is nice. The process took four minutes from start to finish.
TRANSUNION
https://freeze.transunion.com/sf/securityFreeze/landingPage.jsp
A little cumbersome, only because the website wouldn’t work at first. It inexplicably froze my browser. Four times. Once it did work (and I still don’t know why it finally did), the experience was similar to Experian. But in this case I had to also create a username and password for the website, and then choose a PIN. And a “secret question.” Oh, and the password has to be eight characters or more, including both letters and numbers. It would have been nice if they told me that up front, but at least now you know. This one took six minutes, not counting the frozen browser time.
EQUIFAX
https://www.equifax.com/personal/credit-report-services/credit-freeze/
This one is like the others, in terms of the information you need to supply. The biggest difference is that they assign a ten-digit PIN, which you can only access by clicking a button that says “to view your one-time PDF, click here,” which is a little confusing. Clicking on that brings you to a poorly formatted confirmation page that displays your PIN. That’s the only way to find out what your PIN is. But at least this one is free, which seems like the least Equifax can do. Total time for this one was four minutes.
So the whole thing took about fifteen minutes. Tomorrow, I’ll sit down with my wife Laurie and get her to go through the process. Since I’m now an expert, I can probably get it down to 12 minutes. Then I’ll see if I can get my sons (ages 24 and 21) to spend the time to do the same.
At the end of the day, I have to confess that, while it wasn’t as simple as it could be, it wasn’t bad at all.
I finally did it – and so should you.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2018/09/21/equifax-free-credit-freeze-new-law/1377815002/