Debtors' Rights: Dealing with Collection Agencies

Read this to understand debt collection practices and your rights when dealing with debt collectors. Includes form letters you can use to mail to debt collectors requesting that they stop contacting you. #0200EN

Contents

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Collection agencies are calling me nonstop. What can I do?

If you live in Washington State, read this to get help understanding debt collection practices and your rights. If a collection agency is suing you or already has a judgment against you, our packets on How do I Answer a Lawsuit for Debt Collection or How to Claim Personal Property Exemptions have forms, instructions, and advice you can use.

What is a collection agency?

Federal and Washington state laws define a collection agency as a business or an organization whose main purpose is collecting debts. Under this definition, lawyers who regularly collect consumer debt are debt collectors. They also must follow state and federal law.

This definition does not include the credit or collection office of a business whose main purpose is not debt collection. Example: The credit office of a department store or car dealership, or a bank that issues credit cards and tries to collect a debt, is not a "collection agency" within the law's meaning. Collecting debts is not their main business.

Federal and state laws protect debtors who are contacted by collection agencies. Washington's laws are the Collection Agency Act (CAA)) and Consumer Protection Act (CPA). You can read these laws at RCW 19.16.100 and RCW 19.86.010. The federal law is the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA). You can read it at 15 U.S.C. 1692.

What must the collection agency do?

A collection agency is required to contact you in writing about a debt. If the collection agency first contacts you by phone, you should insist they contact you in writing.

The first written notice from a collection agency must have all this information:

*Every communication from a collector must clearly state that they are trying to collect a debt and will use any information they get from you in their efforts.

If the debt is medical debt, the notice must also state these things: