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HE-642 THE FAIR DEBT LAW

HE-642, Reprinted April 1998. Fred Waddell, Extension Family Resource Management Specialist, Associate Professor, Human Development and Family Studies, Auburn University. Originally prepared by Josephine Turner, Extension Program Specialist, Professor, Human Development and Family Studies, Auburn University.

The Fair Debt Law


The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act applies to personal, family, and household debts. These are debts such as car payments, medical care, and credit card accounts. The act only covers collection agencies. It does not cover creditors who collect their own debts. This law does not cancel debts that you owe. What it does is limit the ways that can be used to collect payments.

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act is a law that forbids a debt collector to:

A debt collector may not lie when trying to collect any debt. For instance, a debt collector cannot:

Also, a debt collector may not:

However, under the law the debt collector can:

Your Rights

Within 5 days after you are first contacted, the debt collector must send you a letter telling you:

If you send a letter within 30 days after you were contacted saying that you do not owe the money, the debt collector must not contact you again. He/she must then send proof of why you owe the money before trying to collect again.

For more information, see "Mistakes on Your Credit Bill" in this credit series.

Questions

If you have any questions about the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act that are not answered here, or if you wish to complain about collection practices by creditors, write to:

The Federal Trade Commission
Debt Collection Practices
1718 Peachtree Street, N.E.
Room 1000
Atlanta, GA 30308


For more information, contact your county Extension office. Look in your telephone directory under your county's name to find the number.




For more information, contact your county Extension office. Visit http://www.aces.edu/counties/ or look in your telephone directory under your county's name to find contact information.

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For more information, please visit the Alabama Cooperative Extension System online at http://www.aces.edu or contact your local county Extension agent.