Resumen de la guía
Lo que cubre esta guía
Conozca el estatuto de limitaciones de la deuda por estado y cómo afecta su proceso de reparación de crédito.
Learn about statute of limitations on debt by state and how it affects your credit repair journey.
Resumen de la guía
Conozca el estatuto de limitaciones de la deuda por estado y cómo afecta su proceso de reparación de crédito.
Análisis profundo
Every state sets a time limit on how long a creditor or debt buyer can sue you to collect a debt. This window, called the statute of limitations, varies by state and by the type of debt (written contract, oral contract, promissory note, or open account). Once the SOL expires, the debt becomes time-barred, meaning a court cannot enforce it even if a lawsuit is filed.
The SOL clock generally starts running on the date of first delinquency or the date of the last payment, depending on state law. Some states use the date of breach (when you first missed a payment and never caught up), while others use the date of last activity. This distinction matters because it determines when the clock stops.
A time-barred debt does not disappear. Collectors can still contact you about it, and it can still appear on your credit report for up to 7 years from the date of first delinquency under the FCRA. The SOL only prevents court-enforced collection, not voluntary payment or credit reporting.
Written contract SOLs range from 3 years (Alaska, Delaware, Maryland, Mississippi, New Hampshire, North Carolina, South Carolina) to 10 years (Rhode Island, West Virginia). Most states fall in the 4-6 year range. Credit card debt typically falls under the written contract SOL because the card agreement is a written contract.
Oral contract SOLs are often shorter than written contract SOLs. California sets oral contract SOL at just 2 years while written contracts get 4 years. States like Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana apply the same SOL to both types. Open account SOLs, which sometimes apply to revolving credit, range from 3 to 10 years depending on the state.
Medical debt follows the general contract SOL in most states because it arises from a written or implied agreement for services. However, several states have enacted specific medical debt protections that affect collection practices even within the SOL window, including mandatory screening for financial assistance and billing transparency requirements.
In most states, certain actions by the debtor can restart the SOL clock from zero. The most common triggers are: making a partial payment on the debt, signing a written acknowledgment of the debt, entering a payment agreement, and in some states, making a verbal promise to pay. Each state has different rules about which actions restart the clock.
Debt buyers and collectors frequently employ strategies designed to trick consumers into restarting the clock. Common tactics include: offering to settle for a small amount (the payment restarts the clock), sending letters asking you to confirm the debt amount (the written acknowledgment restarts the clock), and calling to get a verbal promise to pay (which restarts the clock in some states).
Before responding to any collector about an old debt, calculate the SOL status using the date of last activity from your own records, not the date claimed by the collector. If the debt is approaching the SOL deadline, do not make any payment, do not sign anything, and do not make any verbal promise to pay until you have confirmed the SOL status with a consumer attorney.
Once the SOL expires, you have a powerful affirmative defense against any lawsuit. If a collector sues you on time-barred debt, you must raise the SOL defense in your answer to the court. Courts do not automatically dismiss time-barred claims; you must assert the defense. If you fail to appear or fail to raise the defense, the collector may obtain a default judgment.
Under Regulation F (CFPB's Debt Collection Rule, effective November 2021), debt collectors are prohibited from suing or threatening to sue on debt they know or should know is time-barred. This is a significant protection because it shifts the burden to the collector. If a collector files suit on debt they should have known was time-barred, this constitutes both an FDCPA violation and a Regulation F violation.
Paying a time-barred debt is a personal financial decision. It cannot improve your credit score if the debt has already aged off your report. However, some consumers choose to pay for moral or practical reasons. If you decide to pay, negotiate a pay-for-delete agreement or a settlement for less than the full balance, and get the agreement in writing before making any payment.
Document everything. When a collector contacts you about an old debt, note the date, time, caller name, company, and what was said. Request debt validation in writing under FDCPA Section 1692g. Do not acknowledge the debt or promise payment during this initial contact.
Send all communication via certified mail with return receipt. Written communication creates a legal record and prevents disputes about what was said. In your validation request, ask for the date of last payment, the original creditor, the original account number, and the current balance breakdown showing principal, interest, and fees.
If you receive a lawsuit on what you believe is time-barred debt, respond immediately. File an answer with the court raising the SOL defense. Do not ignore the lawsuit; even time-barred claims can result in default judgments if you fail to respond. Many consumer attorneys offer free consultations for SOL defense cases.
Resumen
Lista de verificación
Determine the date of last activity from your own records. Compare against your state's SOL for the applicable debt type.
Any partial payment can restart the SOL clock. Do not pay, promise to pay, or acknowledge the debt until SOL status is confirmed.
Send a written validation request via certified mail. Ask for date of last payment, original creditor, and balance breakdown.
Verify that the reported date of first delinquency matches your records. Report any re-aging to the bureau.
File an answer raising the SOL defense. Do not ignore the summons. Default judgments can be entered even on time-barred debt.
Free consultations are widely available. The 1-year FDCPA limitation makes prompt action on violations critical.
Preguntas frecuentes
The SOL is the time period during which a creditor can sue you to collect a debt. It varies by state (3-10 years) and debt type (written contract, oral contract, open account). Once expired, the debt is time-barred and cannot be enforced through court, though it may still appear on your credit report.
In most states, yes. Making a partial payment is treated as an acknowledgment of the debt that restarts the SOL clock. Some states also restart the clock for written acknowledgments or verbal promises to pay. Never pay on an old debt without confirming the SOL status first.
Under CFPB Regulation F (effective November 2021), collectors are prohibited from suing or threatening to sue on debt they know or should know is time-barred. Filing such a lawsuit violates both the FDCPA and Regulation F.
The court may enter a default judgment against you, even if the debt is time-barred. The SOL is an affirmative defense that you must raise by filing an answer. Never ignore a summons, even for old debt.