For Massachusetts residents dealing with NCO Financial Systems on medical debt
A practical, step-by-step plan to rebuild your credit score after collections, charge-offs, or debt settlement. This guide applies the steps specifically to Massachusetts's laws and NCO Financial Systems's documented collection practices for medical debt accounts. In Massachusetts, the statute of limitations on medical debt is 6 years and wage garnishment is limited to 15% of gross wages.
6 years
Massachusetts Statute of Limitations
$2,459
Average Medical Debt
15% of gross wages
Garnishment Limit
NCO Financial Systems has a documented record of FDCPA violations. If any of these occur during your Massachusetts collection dispute, document them and file immediately.
Steps customized for Massachusetts law, medical debt rules, and NCO Financial Systems's collection patterns.
Before building new credit, dispute every inaccuracy on your reports. Inaccurate collections, wrong balances, or duplicate entries drag your score without valid reason. Use annualcreditreport.com to pull all three and dispute errors.
A secured card requires a deposit (usually $200-500) that becomes your credit limit. Use it for one small recurring expense each month (like a streaming service) and pay the full balance on time every month. This builds positive payment history, which is 35% of your FICO score.
If a family member or close friend has a credit card with good payment history and low utilization, ask to be added as an authorized user. Their positive history can appear on your credit report immediately.
Credit utilization (balance ÷ limit) is 30% of your FICO score. Keep every card below 30% utilization — ideally below 10%. If you have a $500 limit, keep your balance below $150 at all times.
Negative items (collections, late payments, charge-offs) stay 7 years from the date of first delinquency. They impact your score less over time. After 2 years of positive history, you'll see significant improvement. After 4 years, most people achieve good credit despite past issues.
These strategies apply to medical debt specifically. 80% of medical bills contain errors. The No Surprises Act protects against out-of-network surprise bills. Medical debt can't appear on credit reports for 365 days.
Chapter 93A Consumer Protection governs debt collection in Massachusetts in addition to the federal FDCPA. To file a complaint: AG Consumer Protection.
Key Massachusetts Protections:
In Massachusetts, wage garnishment is capped at 15% of gross wages. The following income is protected: Social Security, Unemployment, Workers' comp, Pension, Veterans' benefits. NCO Financial Systems must first obtain a court judgment through proper legal process before any garnishment order can be issued.
The SOL for medical debt in Massachusetts is 6 years. Once expired, NCO Financial Systems cannot win a court judgment even if the debt is real. You must raise the SOL as an affirmative defense in your Answer if sued — never ignore a lawsuit.
Chapter 93A Consumer Protection applies in Massachusetts alongside the federal FDCPA. Complaints can be filed with AG Consumer Protection. Chapter 93A — treble damages for willful violations
Send a certified validation letter within 30 days of first contact. Demand the original creditor name and full chain of assignment. NCO Financial Systems must stop all collection activity until they validate. If they fail to validate, file complaints with the CFPB and AG Consumer Protection.
Generate legally precise dispute letters, cease-and-desist demands, and validation requests built for Massachusetts's specific laws and NCO Financial Systems's documented tactics. Starting at $9.99/month — cancel anytime.