A charge-off is what happens when a lender decides a debt is unlikely to be paid and removes it from its books as a loss, usually after roughly 180 days of missed payments on a credit card. Here is the part that surprises people: you still owe the money. A charge-off is an internal accounting decision, not debt forgiveness. It is also a serious negative mark that can sit on your credit report for years and weigh on your score. This is general information, not personalized advice, so verify the details of your own account and rights.
How a charge-off happens
It is the end of a sequence, not a sudden event:
- A payment is missed, and the account becomes delinquent.
- Further missed payments stack up over several months.
- Around 180 days past due on revolving credit, the lender typically charges off the balance.
- The account is reported as a charge-off to the credit bureaus.
The exact timing varies by lender and loan type, but extended nonpayment is always the trigger.
What it does to your credit
| Effect |
What it means |
| Negative entry |
A charge-off is one of the more damaging marks on a report |
| Time on report |
It can remain for about seven years from the original delinquency |
| Score impact |
Often a meaningful drop, especially if your score was high |
| Status if paid |
It may update to a paid charge-off, but the record can remain |
A paid charge-off is generally viewed more favorably than an unpaid one, but the entry itself does not vanish simply because you settle it. If you are rebuilding afterward, a structured plan for paying off debt with a low income can help you regain footing.
Charge-off vs collection
A charge-off is the lender writing the debt off internally. A collection happens when that debt is then handed or sold to a collection agency that tries to recover it. You can end up with both showing on a report tied to the same original debt. The underlying obligation is the same money; the labels describe who is pursuing it and how it is recorded.
How to handle one
- Confirm the debt is actually yours and the amount is correct; request validation if anything looks off.
- Decide whether to pay in full, settle, or set a payment arrangement, and get any agreement in writing first.
- Keep records of every payment and communication.
- Rebuild going forward with on-time payments on remaining accounts, which carry the most weight over time.
What to skip
- Skip ignoring it. The balance does not disappear, and the mark stays whether or not you engage.
- Skip promises from anyone claiming to erase an accurate charge-off instantly; legitimate negative items are not magically removed.
- Skip making a partial payment without understanding the consequences, since in some cases it can reset timelines; confirm the specifics for your situation.
FAQ
Do I still owe money after a charge-off?
Yes. A charge-off is the lender booking a loss for accounting, not canceling your debt. You can still be pursued for the balance.
How long does a charge-off stay on my credit report?
Generally about seven years from the date of the original missed payment that led to it. Paying it does not automatically remove the record.
Is a paid charge-off better than an unpaid one?
Usually yes. Lenders tend to view a resolved debt more favorably, though the entry itself often remains on the report.
Can a charge-off be removed early?
Accurate charge-offs are not simply erased. You can dispute genuine errors, and some lenders may update the status after payment, but verify what applies to you.
Where to go next
Understand what a good credit score is, learn what a hard inquiry does, and see how a credit-builder loan works.