When a background check reveals information that may impact an employment decision, employers must follow a legally required process before taking adverse action. That process is called pre-adverse action.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) requires employers to provide applicants or employees with specific notices and a reasonable opportunity to dispute inaccurate information before a final decision is made. Understanding each step helps you stay compliant and protect both your organization and the individual.
What is Pre-Adverse Action
Pre-adverse action is the formal notice an employer must provide before taking negative action based in whole or in part on information in a consumer report.
This process gives the individual a chance to review the report and dispute any inaccurate or incomplete information.
Examples of adverse actions include:
- Denying employment
- Rescinding a job offer
- Terminating employment
- Demoting or reassigning an employee
- Denying a promotion
What Employers Must Provide
Before taking adverse action, employers must provide the following:
What Happens After?
If the employer decides to proceed with adverse action after allowing the individual reasonable time to review the information, a final adverse action notice must be sent. This notice must include:
- The employer’s decision.
- The name, address, and phone number of the CRA that furnished the report.
- A statement that the CRA did not make the decision.
- Notice of the individual’s right to dispute the report.
- Notice of the right to obtain another free copy of the report within 60 days.
Why Getting It Right Matters
Failing to follow the pre-adverse action process can lead to compliance violations, costly lawsuits, and damage to your reputation.
A consistent, well-documented process helps you:
- Reduce legal risk
- Support fair hiring
- Build trust with candidates
- Maintain FCRA compliance
A strong process protects candidates, clients, and your business. Compliance is not just paperwork. It is part of building trust and reducing unnecessary risk.
