Yes, it does show up on that persons credit report. If you are late on payments, it will negatively impact his/her credit report.
No. It will show that you had a judgment on your credit report for up to seven years, but it will show a zero balance.
If you filled out any applications for credit and said you were married -or- if you have any joint credit with your spouse, it will be on your credit report.
It depend on the individual credit card companies if they report on your credit history or not, like some department store credit cards may not show on a credit report
Yes. If they extend the line of credit to you, and you do not activate it, it will still show up on your credit report.
Yes, credit card consolidation will affect your credit score. It will show on your credit report for at least five years, it doesn't hurt as bad as bankruptcy however.
The credit report has sections. One gives you name and address and then there is a section titled JUDGEMENTS. This is where one will show up.
No, only the owner and authorized users of the credit card will be reported on the credit card company to the credit agencies. If your husband is an authorized user on the credit card then it will show up on his credit report.
This will stay on your credit indefinitely until it is paid. Once it is paid, it will show a zero balance, but your credit report will still show that you did have a judgment at one time. It will stay on the report for approximately 7 years.
A shortsale will report as Settled for Less than the Full Balance and will stay on your credit report for 7 years.
It will appear on the CR of both parties.
When you fill out an application for credit, one of the questions is Rent? Own? That answer will show on your credit report right next to your address. Whether you paid rent on time won't show in your list of creditors.