Contact USA positions itself as America's oldest credit repair company, claiming to have operated since 1993 and removed over 35,000 negative entries for clients across all 50 states. The company's core business model focuses on credit restoration and rating correction through disputing negative items reported by credit bureaus. Their primary service offering involves requesting credit reports from the three major bureaus, providing free initial consultations, and disputing late payments, collections, charge-offs, foreclosures, judgments, and liens. Contact USA also offers credit monitoring services that provide clients with three annual credit profile reviews with derogatory items highlighted, plus credit report ordering services and educational resources on credit laws.
What distinguishes Contact USA is their emphasis on longevity and scale—they highlight 33 years of operational history and claim to have helped thousands of clients achieve results in months rather than years. The website includes client testimonials, multiple phone lines (718-743-4040, 212-437-9203, 845-621-4040), and additional contact options via email and text. They provide supplementary tools including loan calculators, debt consolidation calculators, and information on bankruptcy, debt settlement, and debt consolidation, positioning themselves as comprehensive credit solutions advisors.
The company's marketing emphasizes pain points (overwhelming bills, creditor harassment) and promises (peace of mind, job prospects, lower interest rates, savings of $5,000-$30,000 on mortgages). However, the website makes several claims that warrant scrutiny: the claim of being "America's oldest credit repair company" since 1993 is difficult to independently verify, and the promise of removing negative items "in only a few months" is vague and likely depends on individual dispute outcomes, which are not guaranteed under the Credit Repair Organizations Act (CROA).
Contact USA operates in a heavily regulated industry. Credit repair companies cannot legally guarantee removal of accurate negative information, and the FCRA limits the reporting period for most negative items to 7 years (10 for bankruptcy). While the company cites CROA compliance in their menu, the website lacks transparent pricing information, specific success rates, or detailed explanations of what the dispute process entails, which are red flags in an industry with substantial regulatory scrutiny.