Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003

Citation: The Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions (FACT) Act (P.L. 108-159).

The FACT Act contains the most comprehensive identity theft provisions in federal law. Among its identity theft-related provisions, the law:


 * requires consumer reporting agencies (CRAs) to follow certain procedures concerning when to place, and what to do in response to, fraud alerts on consumers’ credit files;


 * allows consumers one free copy of their consumer report each year from nationwide CRAs as long as the consumer requests it through a centralized source under rules to be established by the FTC;


 * allows consumers one free copy of their consumer report each year from nationwide specialty CRAs (medical records or payments, residential or tenant history, check writing history, employment history, and insurance claims) upon request pursuant to regulations to be established by the FTC;


 * requires credit card issuers to follow certain procedures if additional cards are requested within 30 days of a change of address notification for the same account;


 * requires the truncation of credit card numbers on electronically printed receipts;


 * requires business entities to provide records evidencing transactions alleged to be the result of identity theft to the victim and to law enforcement agencies authorized by the victim to take receipt of the records in question;


 * requires CRAs to block the reporting of information in a consumer’s file that resulted from identity theft and to notify the furnisher of the information in question that it may be the result of identity theft;


 * requires federal banking agencies, the FTC, and the National Credit Union Administration to jointly develop guidelines for use by financial institutions, creditors and other users of consumer reports regarding identity theft; and


 * extends the statute of limitations for when identity theft cases can be brought.