6 Things Debt Collectors Can and Can’t Do


This week, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau released its annual report outlining how it has worked to enforce the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. Their activities have included efforts to make it easier for consumers to file complaints, as well as greater oversight over non-bank entities that provide consumer products and services. And as of January, the CFPB also has authority over larger entities. Now, any firm with more than $10 million in annual receipts from consumer debt collection activities will be under the authority of the CFPB. Consequently, about 175 U.S. debt collectors will be under their rule.

The report finds the majority of consumer complaints are about the debt-collection industry. According to CFPB, last year more than 125,000 complaints were made about third-party debt collectors and in-house collection departments. The CFPB opened its Office of Consumer Response in July 2011. Since that time, CFPB has aided consumers by handling complaints related to credit cards, mortgages, bank accounts and services, credit reporting, private student loans, and consumer loans.

If you have a complaint for the CFPB about consumer products or services, there are several ways to make one. You have the option of complaining through an online complaint form or by telephone, email, regular mail, and fax. But how do you know if an activity violates the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and should be investigated by the CFPB?

In their annual report on the FDCPA, the bureau includes a reminder of what a debt collector can and cannot do.

Here’s a list of six things to watch out for when dealing with debt collectors:


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