Credit Card Debt Settlement FAQ's
National Debt Settlement Services
How Active Duty Service Members Can Get Debt Relief
Debt Settlement for Authorized Users
Debt Relief and Stopping Collection Agency Harassment
Steps for Self-Debt Relief- How to Reduce Your Debt
How to Rebuild Credit after a Debt Relief Program
Negotiating with Debt Collectors
Lower Payments with Debt Relief Programs
Similarities of Credit Card Counseling and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Debt Relief
How Credit Counseling Debt Relief Works
The Ideal Client for Credit Counseling Debt Relief
Exploiting Non-Profit Debt Relief Status
Why So Much Bad Press for Not-For-Profit Debt Relief Companies?
Failure of Non-Profit Debt Relief Companies to Provide Educational Resources
Abuses of Non-Profit Debt Relief Companies
Finding the Best Credit Counseling Debt Relief Company
Debt Relief for Unpaid Credit Card Debt
Bankruptcy Attorneys Posing as Debt Relief Companies
Avoid Bankruptcy: You May Have to Pay the Debt Back Anyway
When a Bankruptcy Alternative Won
Filing Bankruptcy as a Last Resort
5 Reasons You Should Avoid Bankruptcy
Debt Relief Through Bankruptcy Just Got Harder
Common Mistakes made by Consumer Seeking Debt Reduction and Debt Relief
Saving Your Marriage with Debt Relief
What Makes Up My Credit Score?
Top 5 Reasons People Need Debt Relief
Increasing Minimum Payments to Reduce Debt
Debt Reduction the Snowball Method
Managing Debt - What Are My Options?
Debt Settlement and Consolidation Program
Credit Repair and Debt Relief Solutions- Tips on Harassment from Collectors
The Fair Debt Collections Practices Act, or FDCPA, was passed in 1977 to prevent creditors and collectors from harassing consumers who were in debt. This act placed many strict regulations and guidelines on collection organizations as to what they could and could not do in order to be able to collect on the debts that people owed. Since then, not much has changed, although many fly-by-night collections groups don't follow the rules as they should. Here are some tips on what can and can't be done by collection agencies:
Contacting Debtors
Collection agents have the right to contact the debtor via phone, email, fax, in person, or through the mail. If a lawyer is present, the collector must get in contact with the lawyer and not the debtor directly. If there is no lawyer involved, third party contact is allowed, but only can be used to determine your residential address, your contact phone number as well as your place of employment. Other information cannot be sought.
Collection agencies can NOT contact during inconvenient times. Any debtors that receive calls prior to 8 A.M. or after 9 P.M. are being harassed unless they have given consent for the collector to call during these times. Agencies also cannot contact a place of employment if they are aware that this isn't desired by the employer.
Written notice must be supplied either before or after the initial contact has been made. This letter should state what you owe, the creditor that you owe it to, and what you are able to do if you do NOT owe the debt or the information is incorrect.
If you don't owe, you have 30 days from the receipt of the notice to dispute the charges. If you do this, the agency is no longer allowed to contact you to attempt to collect the debt. However, if they can validate or provide evidence that the debt is, in fact, legitimate, they can continue with the collection efforts as needed.
Collection agencies can NOT:
-Use harassing or abusive measures to collect a debt
-Threaten debtors with violence, harm, or other threats
-Lie or make misleading comments about what will happen if the debt is not paid
-Pretend to be a legal representative, attorney, or other official
-Claim that you will be arrested, sued, or otherwise punished for unpaid debt as a threat
-Provide false information about your accounts, amounts owed, or information about their company or services
If you have been harassed by any collection agencies, you need to report them to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), Better Business Bureau (BBB) in your local area or their home state, and your state Attorney General in order to have record of the harassment on file. With so many people going into debt, collection agencies are popping up all over the place. Many of them use illegal and unprofessional practices to pursue debtors simply to make a profit. Therefore, you should be cautious in speaking with these people, and if they are not professional, courteous, and willing to help you should contact the creditor and request to work directly with them or through another collection agency to repay the debt.

