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Consumer Rights
14 min readApril 8, 2026

Your FDCPA Rights as a Consumer: Everything Debt Collectors Cannot Do

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act gives you powerful rights against abusive collectors. Learn what they cannot do, how to file complaints, and when to sue.

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) is the most important federal law protecting consumers from abusive, deceptive, and unfair debt collection. Enacted in 1977 and codified at 15 U.S.C. §§ 1692-1692p, it applies to third-party debt collectors and governs how they can communicate with you, what they can say, and what happens when they break the rules. Most consumers do not know the full extent of their rights under this law. This guide covers everything.

Who Does the FDCPA Protect?

The FDCPA protects any natural person who allegedly owes a consumer debt. Consumer debt means debt incurred primarily for personal, family, or household purposes. This includes:

  • Credit card debt
  • Medical bills
  • Student loans (when collected by third parties)
  • Auto loans
  • Mortgage debt
  • Personal loans
  • Utility and telecom bills sent to collections
  • Gym memberships and subscriptions sent to collections

The FDCPA does not apply to business debts or debts collected by the original creditor (though many states have laws that extend similar protections to original creditors).

What Debt Collectors Cannot Do

The FDCPA prohibits a wide range of collector behaviors. Here are the most important prohibitions, organized by category.

Harassment and Abuse (15 U.S.C. § 1692d)

A debt collector may not engage in conduct that harasses, oppresses, or abuses any person. Specifically, they cannot:

  • Use or threaten to use violence or criminal means to harm you, your reputation, or your property
  • Use obscene or profane language
  • Publish a list of consumers who refuse to pay debts (except to credit bureaus)
  • Call you repeatedly or continuously with the intent to annoy, abuse, or harass
  • Call without identifying themselves (anonymous or blocked caller ID calls)

False or Misleading Representations (15 U.S.C. § 1692e)

Collectors cannot use any false, deceptive, or misleading representation. This includes:

  • Falsely implying they are attorneys or government representatives
  • Falsely representing the amount, character, or legal status of the debt
  • Threatening to take any action they cannot or do not intend to take (such as threatening a lawsuit they will never file)
  • Falsely representing that you committed a crime by not paying a debt
  • Communicating false credit information (including failing to report a debt as disputed)
  • Using any false name or business name other than their actual company name

Unfair Practices (15 U.S.C. § 1692f)

Collectors cannot use unfair or unconscionable means to collect a debt:

  • Collecting any amount not expressly authorized by the debt agreement or by law (including unauthorized fees, interest, or charges)
  • Depositing a post-dated check prematurely
  • Causing charges to you (such as collect calls) by concealing the purpose of the communication
  • Threatening to repossess or disable property when they have no right to do so
  • Using a postcard to communicate about a debt (which would reveal private financial information to your mail carrier and others)
Key citation: The full list of prohibited practices spans 15 U.S.C. §§ 1692c through 1692f. The CFPB also issued Regulation F (12 C.F.R. Part 1006) in 2021, which modernized FDCPA rules for phone calls, text messages, emails, and social media communications.

Your Right to Stop Communications

Under 15 U.S.C. § 1692c(c), you can order any collector to stop contacting you entirely. Send a written "cease and desist" letter telling them to stop all communication. Once they receive it, they may only contact you to:

  • Confirm they will stop contacting you
  • Notify you of a specific action they intend to take (such as filing a lawsuit)

Important: stopping communication does not eliminate the debt. They can still sue you. But it stops the phone calls, letters, and other pressure tactics.

When and How Collectors Can Contact You

Under 15 U.S.C. § 1692c(a) and Regulation F, collectors:

  • Cannot call before 8:00 AM or after 9:00 PM in your local time zone
  • Cannot contact you at work if they know your employer disapproves
  • Cannot contact your family, friends, neighbors, or coworkers except to locate you (and even then, only once and without revealing that a debt is owed)
  • Under Regulation F, cannot call you more than 7 times within 7 days about a particular debt, or within 7 days after having a phone conversation with you about the debt
Being harassed by collectors? DebtShield generates cease-and-desist letters and dispute letters that cite the exact FDCPA sections being violated.

Your Right to Dispute and Validate

Under 15 U.S.C. § 1692g, every collector must send you a validation notice within five days of their initial communication. This notice must include:

  • The amount of the debt
  • The name of the creditor
  • A statement that you have 30 days to dispute the debt in writing
  • A statement that if you dispute, the collector will verify the debt
  • A statement that you can request the name and address of the original creditor if different from the current one

If you dispute in writing within 30 days, the collector must cease all collection until they provide written verification.

What to Do If a Collector Violates the FDCPA

If a collector violates any provision of the FDCPA, you have several options:

1. File a CFPB Complaint

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is the primary federal agency enforcing the FDCPA. File a complaint at consumerfinance.gov/complaint. The CFPB forwards your complaint to the collector, who must respond within 15 days. The CFPB publishes complaint data publicly, which creates reputational pressure.

2. File a State Attorney General Complaint

Every state has a consumer protection division that investigates debt collection violations. Many states have their own debt collection statutes that provide additional protections. For example:

  • New Hampshire RSA 358-C: Regulates debt collection practices and allows private lawsuits with treble damages
  • California Rosenthal Act: Extends FDCPA-like rules to original creditors
  • New York GBL § 601: Includes additional requirements for collector licensing and disclosures

3. Sue the Collector

Under 15 U.S.C. § 1692k, you can file a private lawsuit against a collector who violates the FDCPA. You can recover:

  • Actual damages: Any financial harm you suffered, including emotional distress in some circuits
  • Statutory damages: Up to $1,000 per lawsuit (regardless of actual harm)
  • Attorney fees and court costs: The collector pays your lawyer if you win

Because the collector pays attorney fees, many consumer rights attorneys take FDCPA cases on contingency. You can find attorneys through the National Association of Consumer Advocates (NACA) at consumeradvocates.org.

4. File an FTC Complaint

The Federal Trade Commission accepts complaints about debt collector violations at reportfraud.ftc.gov. While the FTC does not resolve individual complaints, they use complaint data to identify patterns and bring enforcement actions against the worst offenders.

Statute of limitations for FDCPA lawsuits: Under 15 U.S.C. § 1692k(d), you must file an FDCPA lawsuit within one year from the date of the violation. Do not wait. Document violations immediately and consult an attorney promptly.

Recent FDCPA Updates: Regulation F

In November 2021, the CFPB's Regulation F (12 C.F.R. Part 1006) took effect, modernizing the FDCPA for the digital age. Key changes include:

  • 7-in-7 call rule: Collectors cannot call more than 7 times in 7 days about a particular debt
  • Email and text messages: Collectors can now contact you via email and text, but must include opt-out mechanisms
  • Social media: Collectors may send private messages on social media but cannot post publicly about your debt
  • Itemization date: Collectors must provide an itemization of the debt showing exactly how the balance was calculated

How to Protect Yourself: A Quick Checklist

  1. Never give personal or financial information to a caller you did not initiate contact with
  2. Demand everything in writing. Do not rely on phone conversations.
  3. Send a debt validation letter within 30 days of the initial contact
  4. Keep a log of every call, letter, and interaction with detailed notes
  5. Record phone calls if your state allows one-party consent recording
  6. Check your credit reports regularly for unauthorized or disputed accounts
  7. File complaints immediately when violations occur — do not let them slide
Know your rights. Exercise your rights. DebtShield helps you fight back with AI-generated letters that cite the exact FDCPA provisions being violated. Start your recovery today.

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