Debt Collection Scams
Americans lost $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, according to the FTC.
Debt collection scams use threats and intimidation to demand payment for fake or unverified debts, resulting in 218,736 complaints to the Federal Trade Commission in 2024.
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How It Works
Red Flags
- Threats of jail time, lawsuits, or harm to your credit score for a debt you do not recognize.
- Refusal to provide their name, company name, address, and phone number.
- The collector will not send you a written validation notice of the debt, which is required by law.
- Pressure to pay immediately with an untraceable method like a wire transfer, gift card, or cryptocurrency.
- You are asked to provide sensitive personal or financial information over the phone.
- The caller uses abusive, harassing, or threatening language.
- The debt is unfamiliar or very old, as debts have a statute of limitations for collection.
What to Do If Targeted
- Do not provide or confirm any personal information, such as your Social Security number or bank account details.
- Insist that the collector provide an official written validation notice of the debt as required by the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA).
- Hang up if the caller is threatening or refuses to provide their information. Do not engage further.
- Contact the original creditor directly using a verified phone number to confirm if they hired a collection agency.
- Check your credit reports for free at AnnualCreditReport.com to see if the alleged debt is listed.
- Never make a payment to a suspected scammer, even if the amount is small.
How to Report It
- FTC — File a fraud report with the Federal Trade Commission, the primary agency for tracking these complaints.
- FBI IC3 — Report the scam to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center if the interaction occurred online or via email.
- CFPB — Submit a complaint to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which handles issues with consumer financial products and services.
- FCC — File a complaint about phone scams, robocalls, or unwanted calls with the Federal Communications Commission.
- AARP Fraud Helpline — Call 877-908-3360 for free support from trained fraud specialists. Available to anyone, not just AARP members.
Key Statistics
- The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) received 218,736 reports related to debt collection in 2024. — FTC Consumer Sentinel Network Data Book 2024
- Debt Collection was the sixth most common complaint category reported to the FTC's Consumer Sentinel Network in 2024. — FTC Consumer Sentinel Network Data Book 2024
- Imposter scams, a category that includes debt collection impersonators, caused reported losses of $2.95 billion in 2024. — FTC Consumer Sentinel Network Data Book 2024
- In 2023, the FTC received over 5.4 million total consumer reports about fraud, identity theft, and other consumer protection topics. — FTC Consumer Sentinel Network Data Book 2023
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