Yes, a federal law known as the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003 (FACTA) provides that consumers have free access to their credit reports and the revealing of their credit scores. Consumers can also receive their credit scores from companies, such as Experian, Trans Union, and Equifax.
- What is a credit score?
- What is a credit report?
- What can you do if there is an error on your credit card bill?
- Do credit cards always have annual fees?
- What is a variable rate?
- Where do you go to select the right credit card?
- How can you build good credit?
- What factors determine whether you will receive credit?
- Didn’t the U.S. Congress just pass a new law on credit cards?
- What should you do if you have too much debt?
- How do you know if you have too much debt?
- Are there different types of credit?
- What is APR?
- Why is credit expensive?
- What is credit and why is it so important?
- Did the U.S. Supreme Court rely on international law in reaching its decision against the death penalty for juvenile offenders?
- Can a juvenile defendant receive the death penalty or life in prison without the possibility of parole?
- Do juveniles in juvenile court receive all of the same rights as adults charged in criminal court?
- If you’re convicted of a crime as a juvenile can you be tried as an adult?
- What is ineffective assistance of counsel?


