To unfreeze your credit, you need to contact all three credit bureaus — Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion — either online, by phone, or by mail. The whole process takes as little as 5 to 15 minutes online, it’s completely free, and you can do a temporary lift (for a specific time window) or a full permanent removal, depending on what you need.
| ✓ | A credit freeze locks your credit report so no one can open new accounts in your name. |
| ✓ | Unfreezing online or by phone is instant to 1 hour for all three bureaus. |
| ✓ | It is 100% free to freeze and unfreeze your credit — guaranteed by federal law (FCRA). |
| ✓ | You’ll need your SSN, date of birth, address, and the PIN or password you set when you froze your credit. |
| ✓ | You can do a temporary lift or a permanent removal — both options available at all three bureaus. |
| ✓ | You do NOT need to unfreeze all three bureaus every time — only unfreeze the one(s) a lender will actually check. |
- What Does ‘Unfreezing Your Credit’ Actually Mean?
- Step-by-Step: How to Unfreeze at All 3 Bureaus
- The Fastest Way to Unfreeze All 3 Bureaus
- Temporary Lift vs. Permanent Removal
- Common Mistakes People Make
- Is It Free to Unfreeze in 2026?
- When Should You Keep Your Credit Frozen?
- Pro Tips for Managing Your Credit Freeze
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Final Thoughts
What Does ‘Unfreezing Your Credit’ Actually Mean?
Let’s back up for a second, because there’s some terminology here that trips people up.
A credit freeze — sometimes called a security freeze — is a tool that prevents lenders, credit card companies, landlords, and others from pulling your full credit report. If no one can see your report, no one can approve a brand-new line of credit in your name. It’s one of the best defenses against identity theft out there.
But here’s the thing: once your credit is frozen, it stays frozen until you tell it otherwise. That means when you legitimately want to apply for something — a new credit card, a car loan, a mortgage, an apartment — you have to lift that freeze first. Otherwise, the lender will try to pull your credit, hit a wall, and reject your application automatically. Awkward.
There are two ways to lift a freeze:
Neither option is permanent in the sense that you can always re-freeze whenever you want. The whole system is designed to give you control.
Real-life example: If you’re buying a house, your mortgage lender will typically check all three bureaus — Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion. In that case, you’d want to unfreeze all three. But if you’re just applying for a new credit card and the issuer only pulls from Equifax, you only need to lift the Equifax freeze.
Step-by-Step: How to Unfreeze Your Credit at All 3 Bureaus
Okay, here’s the part you actually came for. Let’s walk through exactly how to do this, bureau by bureau.
Gather Your Information First
Before you open a single browser tab, get this information handy:
- Your full Social Security Number (SSN)
- Your date of birth
- Your current address (and previous address if you’ve moved recently)
- The PIN or password you set when you originally froze your credit
💡 Pro tip: Keep all three bureau PINs written down somewhere safe — a password manager, a locked notes app, or even a physical folder in a secure spot at home. You’ll thank yourself later.
Unfreeze at Experian
Go to experian.com/freeze/center.html. Log in or use your PIN. Choose ‘Lift Freeze,’ pick temporary or permanent, set dates if needed, and confirm.
Call 1-888-EXPERIAN (1-888-397-3742). Follow automated prompts — have SSN and PIN ready. Lift is typically processed immediately.
Experian tip: Experian’s website is generally the smoothest of the three for managing freezes. Their freeze center is easy to find, and the temporary lift option is clearly labeled. Experian also lets you set an end date down to the specific day.
Unfreeze at Equifax
Go to equifax.com/personal/credit-report-services/credit-freeze/ and log in or create a myEquifax account. Navigate to ‘Manage Security Freeze’ and select to lift it.
Call 1-800-685-1111 (or 1-800-349-9960 for automated freeze line). Have SSN, date of birth, and PIN or answers to security questions ready.
Equifax tip: After Equifax’s major data breach a few years back, they’ve invested heavily in making their freeze and unfreeze process more accessible. You now manage everything through a myEquifax account. If you haven’t set one up yet, you’ll need to create an account before you can manage your freeze online.
Unfreeze at TransUnion
Go to transunion.com/credit-freeze and log in to your TransUnion service center account. Select ‘Credit Freeze,’ then choose to temporarily lift or remove the freeze.
Call 1-888-909-8872. This line is automated and available 24/7. Have SSN and freeze PIN or passphrase ready.
TransUnion tip: TransUnion’s online portal can be a little finnicky if you haven’t logged in in a while. If you’re having trouble signing in, do the password reset before you’re under a time crunch — like when you’re sitting across from a car dealer waiting for credit approval.
The Fastest Way to Unfreeze All 3 Bureaus
If you need all three unfrozen — which is common for mortgage applications and some auto loans — here’s the most efficient approach:
- 1 Open three browser tabs, one for each bureau’s freeze center: Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion.
- 2 Start the process on all three simultaneously rather than waiting for each one to fully complete before moving on.
- 3 If you can, have your phone nearby so you can call one bureau’s automated line while completing the process online for the others.
- 4 Set identical date ranges on all three for the temporary lift — this makes it easier to remember when your credit will be re-frozen.
Doing them in parallel instead of sequentially can cut your total time from 30–45 minutes down to 10–15 minutes. It sounds like a small thing, but when you’re in the middle of a home purchase and your lender needs your credit report by end of day, every minute counts.
Temporary Lift vs. Permanent Removal — Which Should You Choose?
Here’s a quick breakdown to help you decide:
| Feature | ⏰ Temporary Lift | 🔓 Permanent Removal |
|---|---|---|
| Duration | Set start & end dates | Indefinite / until you re-freeze |
| Best for | One-time loan / credit application | No longer need protection |
| Effort | Quick — done online in minutes | Same effort, but a bigger decision |
| Risk level | Lower — auto re-freezes | Higher — credit stays open |
| Cost | Free (by federal law) | Free (by federal law) |
| Re-freeze later? | Yes, still frozen after lift ends | Yes, you can freeze again anytime |
Bottom line: if you’re unfreezing for one specific purpose — applying for a car loan, signing up for a new credit card, renting an apartment — go with a temporary lift. If you’re going through a period of major financial life changes, a permanent removal might make more sense.
Common Mistakes People Make When Unfreezing Their Credit
Here are the most common ways people mess it up — and how to avoid them.
This is the big one. Let’s say you’re applying for a mortgage. You carefully unfreeze Experian and TransUnion… and then your lender pulls from Equifax. Application denied. Panic ensues.
✅ The fix: Ask your lender upfront which credit bureau(s) they plan to pull from. When in doubt, unfreeze all three.
This is more common than you’d think. If this happens to you: all three bureaus have a PIN recovery or reset process. You’ll need to verify your identity — usually by submitting a copy of your government-issued ID and proof of address. It adds time, so don’t let this be a surprise.
✅ The fix: Save all three PINs in a password manager like Bitwarden or 1Password. Label them clearly: “Experian Freeze PIN,” “Equifax Freeze PIN,” etc.
Even though online unfreezes are usually instant, things can go wrong. Websites go down. You can’t find your PIN. Your account is locked. Your lender needs the credit pull done by noon today.
True story: I once applied for a credit card and forgot my Equifax freeze was still active. My application bounced, and by the time I lifted the freeze and reapplied, the welcome bonus offer had expired.
✅ The fix: If you know you’ll be applying for credit in the next week or two, lift the freeze a day or two ahead of time, not the morning of.
Federal law now requires bureaus to process freeze lifts within one hour for online and phone requests. In practice, it’s almost always instant. The one exception: if you submit a request by mail, that can take up to three business days.
✅ The fix: Stick to online or phone requests — avoid mail unless you absolutely have to.
If you did a permanent removal and don’t re-freeze once your credit application is done, your credit report stays open. If you’re done applying and want the protection back, log back in and re-freeze.
✅ The fix: It takes about 2 minutes per bureau. Just do it.
Is It Free to Unfreeze Your Credit in 2026?
This is one of the most searched questions about credit freezes, and the answer hasn’t changed: under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), all three major credit bureaus — Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion — are federally required to let you freeze and unfreeze your credit at no charge.
This wasn’t always the case. Before 2018, many states allowed bureaus to charge small fees (usually $5–$10) to freeze or unfreeze. The Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act changed that permanently, making the service free for everyone nationwide.
⚠️ Warning: If you’re ever on a website that claims to charge you for a freeze or unfreeze, close that tab immediately. You’re either on the wrong website or a scam site.
Quick reminder: The official websites are experian.com, equifax.com, and transunion.com. Double-check the URL before entering any personal information.
When Should You Keep Your Credit Frozen?
Honestly? Most of the time, for most people.
If you’re not actively applying for new credit — no new credit cards, no loans, no apartment hunting — there’s really no downside to keeping your credit frozen. Your existing credit cards and accounts work perfectly fine with a freeze in place. It doesn’t affect your credit score. It doesn’t prevent you from checking your own credit. It just stops new hard inquiries from going through.
You should especially keep your credit frozen if:
- 🛡 You’ve been a victim of identity theft or your personal info has been exposed in a data breach.
- 🔐 Your Social Security Number has been compromised.
- 👨👩👧 You have elderly parents or children whose credit you want to protect.
- 📅 You simply don’t plan to apply for any new credit in the foreseeable future.
Think of a credit freeze as a deadbolt on your credit file. You don’t remove the deadbolt from your front door permanently just because you need to go out occasionally — you just unlock it when you need it and lock it back up when you’re done.
Pro Tips for Managing Your Credit Freeze (and Your Credit in General)
Once you’ve got the freeze process down, here are a few extra tips that make managing your credit a whole lot easier:
If you set a temporary lift for a specific date range, put a reminder on your calendar for a day or two before the end date. This way, if your lender needs more time, you can extend the lift before it automatically re-freezes.
Different lenders pull from different bureaus. Many credit card issuers lean on TransUnion or Experian. Mortgage lenders often pull all three. Some auto lenders pull just one. A quick Google search for “[lender name] which credit bureau” will often give you the answer before you apply.
A freeze doesn’t mean you should stop paying attention to your credit. Existing accounts can still be affected by fraud, late payments, or errors. Free tools like Credit Karma (TransUnion and Equifax data) or AnnualCreditReport.com let you check your reports at no cost. Some people also use a paid credit monitoring service that watches all three bureaus simultaneously and alerts you to any suspicious activity.
A password manager isn’t just for website passwords — it’s a great place to store sensitive info like credit bureau PINs, account numbers, and security questions. If you don’t have one yet, most have free tiers that are more than enough for basic use.
Children’s Social Security Numbers are a surprisingly common target for identity theft, because nobody checks their credit for years. All three bureaus allow parents and guardians to freeze a minor’s credit. It’s a one-time setup that can save a massive headache down the road.
Frequently Asked Questions
Final Thoughts
Here’s the thing about unfreezing your credit: it sounds way more complicated than it actually is. The first time you do it, you might feel a little intimidated. But once you’ve gone through the process once at each bureau, you’ll realize it’s genuinely just a few clicks online.
The most important things to remember:
- Free It’s free. Full stop. The Fair Credit Reporting Act guarantees this.
- Fast Online lifts at Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion are usually instant or near-instant.
- Smart You don’t always need all three. Ask your lender which bureau they pull from.
- Safer A temporary lift is almost always better than a permanent removal unless you need frequent access.
- PINs Keep your PINs somewhere safe. Seriously.
Credit freezes are one of the best — and most underused — tools for protecting your financial identity. The small amount of friction they add when you want to apply for credit is a very worthwhile trade-off for the protection they provide the rest of the time.
So if yours is frozen right now and you need to lift it, go ahead and do it. It’ll take you 15 minutes, tops. And when you’re done, go ahead and re-freeze it — because your credit deserves a good deadbolt.
Last updated: 2026 | This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. Always verify current processes directly with Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion, as procedures may change.



