Legal Rights

What Is a CPN — and Why You Should Never Use One

A CPN (credit privacy number) is marketed as a legal way to start fresh with credit. It isn't. Learn why CPNs are fraud, who gets hurt, and what actually works instead.

F
FixMyCredit99 Team
(Updated June 16, 2026)
11 min read

Key Takeaways

  • A CPN is not a government-issued number and has no legal status
  • Using a CPN on a credit application is federal fraud, full stop
  • CPN numbers are often stolen SSNs belonging to children or vulnerable adults
  • Sellers who promise a 'fresh start' through a CPN are running a scam
  • Legitimate options — disputing real errors, building credit — actually work

What Is a CPN?

CPN stands for "credit privacy number" — sometimes called a "credit profile number." It is a nine-digit number marketed online as a legal replacement for your Social Security Number (SSN) that lets you apply for credit under a "clean" identity, hiding a damaged credit history from lenders.

The pitch sounds compelling if you're drowning in collections or dealing with a bankruptcy. Start fresh. Nobody sees your past. New number, new you.

The problem is that none of it is real. No government agency issues CPNs. No law authorizes them. The entire concept is fabricated by fraudsters who charge anywhere from $50 to several hundred dollars for a number that will put you at risk of federal prosecution.

Not a Gray Area

CPNs are not a loophole, a privacy tool, or a legally ambiguous product. Using one on a credit application is a federal crime. The FTC, FBI, and federal prosecutors have all explicitly stated this — and pursued cases to conviction.

What Sellers Claim

CPN sellers are skilled at making the product sound above-board. Understanding their talking points is the first step to seeing through them.

FeatureWhat Sellers SayThe Reality
Legal basis"Privacy Act of 1974 allows it"The Privacy Act covers government records, not credit apps
Source"Government-approved number"Often a stolen or fabricated SSN
Purpose"Protect your privacy, not hide from creditors"Deceive lenders about your identity and history
Risk"Completely legal, no risk"Federal fraud charges, prison time, restitution
Equivalence"Same as an EIN for personal use"An EIN cannot legally substitute for an SSN

The Privacy Act argument is the most common. Sellers claim the law gives individuals the right to keep their SSN private and that a CPN is simply a lawful substitute. That is a deliberate misreading. The Privacy Act limits how government agencies can demand your SSN. It says nothing about private credit applications, and it certainly does not create an alternative identification number.

Why a CPN Is Illegal

Applying for credit requires you to accurately identify yourself. When a lender asks for your Social Security Number, several federal laws come into play simultaneously.

Making False Statements to Financial Institutions

18 U.S.C. § 1014 makes it a crime to knowingly make a false statement or report to a federally insured financial institution for the purpose of influencing a loan or credit decision. Providing a CPN instead of your actual SSN is a textbook false statement. This offense carries up to 30 years in prison per count.

Wire Fraud and Bank Fraud

Because most credit applications are submitted electronically or involve federally insured banks, prosecutors frequently also charge wire fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1343) and bank fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1344). Both carry penalties of up to 20 years per count. These are not minor charges.

Identity Theft

If the CPN turns out to be a real SSN belonging to another person — which happens routinely — you have committed aggravated identity theft under 18 U.S.C. § 1028A. That statute carries a mandatory minimum sentence that stacks on top of any other charges. You serve that time in addition to, not instead of, whatever else you're convicted of.

The Real Costs of Using a CPN

Pros

  • None — there are no legitimate benefits to using a CPN

Cons

  • Federal fraud charges with sentences up to 30 years per count
  • Aggravated identity theft carries a mandatory minimum sentence
  • All credit accounts opened under a CPN can be clawed back by lenders
  • Credit bureaus will flag and freeze the fraudulent profile
  • You may owe full restitution to any financial institution deceived
  • A criminal record makes rebuilding legitimate credit far harder

Your Real Credit Report Has Real Errors Worth Disputing

Before anyone convinces you that a fresh identity is the only option, let us show you what's actually fixable on your credit report. Legitimate disputes under the FCRA are free and legal.

Check My Report

Where CPN Numbers Come From

This is the part of the CPN story that most sellers never explain — and it is important to understand before you feel any sympathy for the product.

Stolen SSNs

A significant portion of CPNs are Social Security Numbers taken from real people: children (whose SSNs are rarely monitored), elderly individuals, people with disabilities, and deceased individuals. When you use one of these numbers, a real human being — often a minor who doesn't know their identity has been compromised — discovers the problem years later when they try to open their first bank account or apply for student loans.

Synthetically Generated Numbers

Some sellers generate nine-digit numbers that don't yet appear in credit bureau databases. They look "clean" because no one has used them. But the Social Security Administration issues SSNs in a defined range, and any nine-digit number within that range either already belongs to someone or will be assigned to a child in the future. There is no such thing as a "spare" SSN.

Children Are the Most Common Victims

The FTC has documented cases where CPNs turned out to be the Social Security Numbers of children — sometimes infants. A child won't apply for credit for 16 to 18 years, which makes their SSN a prime target. When they try to build credit as young adults, they discover a fraudulent history they had nothing to do with.

Red Flags of a CPN Scam

CPN sellers have adapted their language over the years to sound more professional, but the warning signs remain consistent.

They Guarantee a "Fresh Start" or "New Credit Identity"

Legitimate credit repair is honest about what it can and cannot do. Anyone guaranteeing a clean slate through a new number is not offering repair — they're selling fraud.

They Reference the Privacy Act as Legal Cover

As noted above, this is a misrepresentation of federal law. If a seller cites the Privacy Act to justify a CPN, that's a signal they're either deliberately deceptive or legally uninformed. Neither is good.

They Instruct You to Apply for Credit Differently

Common instructions from CPN sellers include: get a new address, use a different phone number, don't use your real name exactly, open a new email address. These aren't privacy tips — they're instructions for building a fraudulent identity profile, step by step.

They Charge Upfront Fees

The Credit Repair Organizations Act (CROA) prohibits legitimate credit repair companies from charging fees before services are rendered. CPN sellers typically demand payment upfront. That's a legal violation on top of everything else.

Prices That Seem Reasonable for Something "Life-Changing"

$49, $99, $199. The pricing is deliberately accessible — low enough to seem like a bargain, high enough to be profitable at scale. The accessibility is the point. They're not offering a service; they're running a volume operation targeting desperate people.

Report CPN Sellers

If you encounter a CPN seller — online, on social media, or through word of mouth — you can report them to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and to your state attorney general's office. You may also report to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at ic3.gov.

What to Do Instead

Here's the honest truth that CPN sellers don't want you to hear: most people who are tempted by a CPN have legitimate options they haven't fully explored. Damaged credit is real, but it's not permanent — and fixing it legally is far less risky than the alternative.

  1. Pull Your Free Credit Reports

    Get your reports from all three bureaus at AnnualCreditReport.com. You're entitled to free reports weekly. Read every account carefully. Errors are more common than most people realize — studies suggest roughly one in five reports contains a mistake significant enough to affect creditworthiness.

  2. Identify and Dispute Genuine Errors

    Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), you have the right to dispute any inaccurate, incomplete, or unverifiable information. Bureaus must investigate and correct or remove errors within 30 days. Common disputable items include accounts that aren't yours, wrong balances, outdated negative items, and duplicate entries.

  3. Validate Debts in Collections

    Under the FDCPA, you can request debt validation from any collection agency within 30 days of first contact. If they can't verify the debt, they must stop collection activity. Unverifiable collection accounts can be removed from your credit report through proper dispute channels — no fake number required.

  4. Build Credit with Legitimate Tools

    Secured credit cards, credit-builder loans from credit unions, and becoming an authorized user on a trusted person's account are all proven methods. They work. They're legal. They build a real history that belongs to you and that you can carry forward indefinitely.

  5. Be Patient — Negative Items Age Off

    Most negative items — late payments, collections, charge-offs — stay on your report for seven years from the date of first delinquency. After that, they disappear automatically. Bankruptcies drop off after seven to ten years. Your credit history improves with time even without taking any action.

  6. Report Identity Theft If You're a Victim

    If someone else's fraud is polluting your credit report, that's a problem the FCRA was specifically designed to address. File a report at IdentityTheft.gov, place a fraud alert or credit freeze with the bureaus, and dispute the fraudulent accounts. These are free, legal tools with real teeth.

The FCRA Gives You Real Power

The Fair Credit Reporting Act isn't a technicality — it's a federal law that gives consumers enforceable rights. Bureaus that ignore legitimate disputes can be sued. Creditors who report false information can be sued. These are real tools with real results, and they don't put you at risk of a federal conviction.

If You Already Bought a CPN

If you purchased a CPN but have not yet used it on any credit application, the simplest answer is: don't. Throw it away. You have not committed a crime yet. Buying the number is not itself a criminal act in most jurisdictions — using it is.

If you have already used a CPN on one or more credit applications, your situation is more serious and you should get legal advice before taking any other steps.

Steps to Take Immediately

Stop using the CPN on any new applications. Do not attempt to close or dispute the accounts opened under it on your own, as that could complicate any subsequent legal matter. Consult a consumer protection attorney or criminal defense attorney — many offer free initial consultations — to understand your specific exposure and options.

Lenders regularly audit accounts for SSN mismatches against Social Security Administration records. When they find one, they typically close the account, report the matter to law enforcement, and pursue recovery of any funds extended. Acting proactively, before a lender escalates, gives you more options than waiting for a knock on the door.

You Were Targeted by a Scam — But That Doesn't Eliminate Legal Risk

Many people who purchase CPNs are themselves victims of predatory operators who deliberately target people in financial distress. That context matters morally and may matter to a prosecutor or judge. It does not, however, eliminate the legal risk of having used the number. Get advice from an attorney, not from the person who sold you the CPN.

Real Disputes, Real Results — No Identity Required

FixMyCredit99 helps you dispute genuine inaccuracies on your credit report using your actual identity and your actual rights under the FCRA. No shortcuts that put you at legal risk. Free tier available; Pro plan at $99/month for unlimited disputes.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Federal law requires you to provide your actual Social Security Number on credit applications. Using any other nine-digit number in its place — regardless of what a seller calls it — is making a false statement to a financial institution, which is a federal crime under 18 U.S.C. § 1014. The fact that the number was sold to you as a 'legal CPN' is not a defense.
In most cases a CPN is either a stolen Social Security Number or a newly issued SSN belonging to a child, elderly person, or deceased individual. Sellers sometimes generate numbers that happen to be unregistered in credit bureau databases, but those numbers still legally belong to someone — often a child whose credit has never been used yet. Using that number constitutes identity theft.
Yes. People who use CPNs have been charged with wire fraud, bank fraud, identity theft, and making false statements to financial institutions. Federal convictions in documented cases have resulted in prison sentences ranging from one to twenty years, along with substantial fines and court-ordered restitution. Ignorance of the law — including being deceived by a seller — rarely succeeds as a defense.
No. An Employer Identification Number (EIN) is a legitimate nine-digit number issued by the IRS for business tax purposes. You cannot legally use an EIN in place of your SSN on a personal credit application. Some CPN sellers falsely claim the two are interchangeable, but using an EIN as a personal SSN substitute is also fraud. Legitimate business credit is built under a business entity, not a personal disguise.
Stop using it immediately and do not apply for any more credit with it. Consult a consumer protection attorney — many offer free initial consultations — to understand your exposure. If you used the CPN on existing applications, the accounts may be closed and reported to law enforcement by the lender. Acting now, before lenders detect the fraud, gives you the best chance to limit the legal and financial fallout.

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