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Time-Barred Debts: When Collectors Cannot Sue You for Unpaid Debts

After a period of time, creditors lose the right to sue you for unpaid debts.

If you have old, unpaid debts, you may be safe from a lawsuit to collect the debt. This is because a creditor or debt collector has a limited number of years to sue you for an unpaid debt. This time period is set by state law and is called the statute of limitations.

The time allowed varies greatly from state to state and for different kinds of debts. Under certain circumstances, this time period can be restarted. So be very careful when talking to debt collectors about old debts. If you say the wrong thing, you could extend the time the creditor has to sue you for the debt.

When Are Debts Time-Barred?

To determine if your debt is time-barred – that is, too old for a creditor or collector to sue you for it – you must do some legwork.

Determine what kind of debt it is. Is the debt based on a written contract, oral contract, or a promissory note (a written promise to pay money to somebody)? Is it a credit account? If so, is it open-end or closed-end credit?

Determine when the debt was due. This is when the statute of limitations starts ticking. For open-end accounts, the statute of limitations starts to run when the first payment was due.

Find the applicable statute of limitations. Statutes of limitations are set by state law. They usually range from about three to ten years and depend on the type of debt. To find out the statute of limitations for debts in your state, you can:

Using the Statute of Limitations

If the creditor has waited too long to sue you, you must raise this as a defense in the papers you file in response to the lawsuit. If you can prove that the debt is older than the statute of limitations, then you will not have to pay it. If the creditor or debt collector knows that the statute of limitations has expired on the debt and still sues you, it may have violated the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA). (For more on the FDCPA, see Dealing With Creditors FAQ.)

However, a statute of limitations does not eliminate the debt – it merely limits the judicial remedies available to the creditor or collection agency after a certain period of time. A debt collector may still seek voluntary payment of an old debt even though the law cannot force you to pay it.


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