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This is the SOL, ( statute of limitations for State Oral Agreements, Written Contracts, Promissory Notes, and Open Accounts.And the years they are still able to collect.Alabama 6 6 6 3 Alaska 6 6 6 6 Arizona 3 6 5 3 Arkansas 3 5 6 3 California 2 4 4 4 Colorado 6 6 6 6 Connecticut 3 6 6 6 Delaware 3 3 6 3 D.C. 3 3 3 3 Florida 4 5 5 4 Georgia 4 6 6 4 Hawaii 6 6 6 6 Idaho 4 5 10 4 Illinois 5 10 6 5 Indiana 6 10 10 6 Iowa 5 10 5 5 Kansas 3 5 5 3 Kentucky 5 15 15 5 Louisiana 10 10 10 3 Maine 6 6 6 6 Maryland 3 3 6 3 Massachusetts 6 6 6 6 Michigan 6 6 6 6 Minnesota 6 6 6 6 Mississippi 3 3 3 3 Missouri 5 10 10 5 Montana 5 8 8 5 Nebraska 4 5 6 4 Nevada 4 6 3 4 New Hampshire 3 3 6 3 New Jersey 6 6 6 6 New Mexico 4 6 6 4 New York 6 6 6 6 North Carolina 3 3 5 3 North Dakota 6 6 6 6 Ohio 6 15 15 ? Oklahoma 3 5 5 3 Oregon 6 6 6 6 Pennsylvania 4 6 4 6 Rhode Island 15 15 10 10 South Carolina 10 10 3 3 South Dakota 6 6 6 6 Tennessee 6 6 6 6 Texas 4 4 4 4 Utah 4 6 6 4 Vermont 6 6 5 6 Virginia 3 5 6 3 Washington 3 6 6 3 West Virginia 5 10 6 5 Wisconsin 6 6 10 6 Wyoming 8 10 10 8

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Collections Action - A creditor or third-party collection agency can legally demand or request payment on a debt, via letters and phone calls, forever, as long as the debt remains unpaid. A debtor can order a third-party collector to cease communication, as per the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, which should stop routine demands from that source. (See our Collection Agency FAQ for details.) In practice, the older a debt is, the less vigorous the collection efforts will be, and the more likely the creditor or collector will give up easily. And, unless the debt is secured by some type of property (e.g. a car), they cannot actually force a debtor to pay without a lawsuit.

Lawsuits - When a consumer is seriously delinquent (late) on a debt for a significant amount, there is the possibility of the creditor filing a lawsuit. The time limit for doing so is known as the statute of limitations, which is set by individual states. The relevant statute is the one for the state in which the debtor resided at the time of the delinquency. The expiration of the statute of limitations covering a debt will not necessarily prevent a lawsuit, but it will provide an absolute defense, whereby the debtor is simply required to file a response with the court, pointing out this fact, in order to have the suit dismissed. Here is a chart with the statute of limitations for each state and type of debt.

Judgements - If a lawsuit has already been filed and won by a creditor, there is another, separate statute of limitations for enforcing (collecting) the judgment. Here is a chart with the judgment enforcement time limits for each state.

Federal Taxes - Ten years from the date of the assessment for delinquent amounts, unless a lien has been filed. Tax liens on, for example, real estate, remain until the back taxes have been paid.

Student Loans - There is no statute of limitations or other time limit for lawsuits or other enforcement action on defaulted federal student loans.

Credit ReportingThe time limits for various types of information to appear on consumer credit reports are set by the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act.

Making payments or partial payments on bad debts does not effect the running of the credit reporting time limits, except in the case of tax liens and federal student loans. All other types of items should expire on schedule, based on the original dates, regardless of when or whether they are paid. There was previously a great deal of confusion over the starting point, which could have been interpreted as the date of the last activity on the account. This resulted in the possibility of "re-setting the clock" on an old bad debt by making a payment on it, or by paper-shuffling on the part of collection agencies. The issue was clarified in the 1996 amendments to the FCRA, which set a specific starting date related to the original delinquency date (see FCRA Section 605 (c) (1).)

Inquiries - Two years.

Late Payments - Seven years from the month in which the late payment was due. If there are multiple late payments in one account item, then they will each expire individually.

Charge-Offs - Seven years. The time runs from the date of the delinquency, plus 180 days. If a payment was due on an account on January 1, 2000, but the debtor defaulted, and never caught up to become current again, and the account is eventually declared a charge-off by the creditor, then the seven year reporting time limit starts running on July 1, 2000, with the item scheduled to expire from his/her credit reports on July 1, 2007. Here is our article on charge-offs.

Collection Accounts - Seven years. The running of this time limit is the same as with charge-offs. The date of delinquency still refers to the original delinquency with the original creditor, regardless of when the collection agency began working the debt. This includes debts that have been bought by a collection agency. Collection agencies cannot legitimately "re-set the clock."

Lawsuits And Judgements - Seven years or until the governing statute of limitations has expired, whichever is longer.

Bankruptcy (Chapter 7) - Ten years (from the date of entry of the order for relief or the date of adjudication.

Bankruptcy (Chapter 13) - Seven years.

Paid Tax Liens - Seven years from the date of payment.

Unpaid Tax Liens - Forever (unless paid - see above.)

Unpaid Federal Student Loans - Forever (unless paid, after which they can appear for seven years.)

The above time limits apply to credit reports which would be available to creditors for most types of credit applications. However, the credit bureaus are legally permitted to disclose older information in the following situations:

A credit application involving a principle loan amount of $150,000 or more.

An application for a life insurance policy with a payout of $150,000 or more.

An application for employment in a position paying $75,000 per year or more.

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Q: What recourse does a collection agency have on a debt that is twelve years old?
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Related questions

How long does a third party collection agency have to collect on a debt after the debt is charged off by the original creditor?

There is no time limit placed on their collection efforts to collect a debt. However, there is a SOL for legal recourse and for how long it can report on your credit reports. Reporting time is 7 years and so far as the SOL for legal recourse you would have to check your state laws to see how long.


How do you fight a collection agency on an out of state improper turn ticket from 14 years ago?

How do you fight a collection agency on an out of state improper turn ticket from 14 years ago?


Can a collection agency try to collect a debt after 7 years?

They can send you a letter, but they cannot sue you.


If one collection agency fails to collect a medical bill and sell it to another agency how long will the bill stay on a credit report?

seven years


If you receive no bill and 14 years later you get a statement from a collections agency is that legal?

If the bill is unpaid, a collection agency can attempt to collect forever if they choose to. Nothing illegal about it.


How long do unpaid credit cards stay on your credit report in NY state?

Technically seven to ten years. When a credit card goes into default it gets written off on the creditors taxes as a loss and gets sold to a collection agency for 10 to 20 percent of the original loss. Down the line it gets sold from collection agency to collection agency.


Can a credit collection agency pursue payment on an account that has been closed for 10 years?

Yes, there is no statute of limitations on debt.


How many years can a collection agency still pull your credit report?

A collection agency can't access a credit report w/o the permission of the party involved. They may try to mislead someone into believing they are able to do so, and that is a violation of the FDCPA and should be reported as such.


Can a collection agency attempt to collect on a debt that is almost 10 years old?

Yes, with 10 years interest. What about statute of limitations? Well, they can sure TRY, but I wouldn't worry about it too much. And if it becomes a case of where they are harassing you, YOU most likely have the more powerful position at this point and can take steps to halt their harassing ways. After the statute of limitations has expired (check with your state to find out exactly how long this is), there is very little legal recourse the collection agency has to collect on the debt owed. Once it has become outdated and removed from your credit report ( after 7 years), it can never again be reported (LEGALLY). I can tell you, I have one now trying to collect a debt that is back from 1991 AND had actually been paid to the original lender. They (collection agencies) are like a bunch of sharks!


Can a collection agency garnish wages for debt for repo after 9 or 10 years in the state of Arkansas. What is the statute of limitations?

yes it is an option for them


Can a collection agency who says they are with a law office sue you if they purchased your debt three years ago from the original creditor in Arizona?

yes.


If a debt is sold to another company for collection does it take another 7 years from the transfer of debt for it to come off your credit report in California?

The date of first delinquency should be the date that starts the clock for the 7 years. Meaning if you went 30 days late in April 2005, on a credit card, and then 60, 90 then 120, then the account would go to charge off status but the date of first delinquency would be April 2005. In CA, 4 years from the date of first delinquency is within the statute of limitations is in effect that a creditor or collection agency can sue you for the amount owed. This will vary from state to state, If the collection agency sells the collection to another collection company, the start date is the date of first delinquency, April 2005. If the collection agency changes the date, that is called re-aging and is illegal unless you set up new terms with collection agency