WUS Debt Wire

Debt Validation Letter

A written request that requires a debt collector to prove a debt is valid and theirs to collect, under the FDCPA.

A debt validation letter is your written demand to a collector: prove this debt is real, prove it’s actually yours, and prove you have the right to collect it. This isn’t a favor you’re asking for — it’s a right written directly into the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.

Here’s the mechanism behind it: collectors are required to send you a written notice, either with their first contact or within five days after, spelling out the amount, the original creditor, and your 30-day window to dispute it. Dispute it in writing inside that window, and they legally have to stop collecting until they send you proof.

Don’t expect courtroom-level documentation, though — collectors usually satisfy this with something like an account statement showing the debt and who it’s from. It won’t make a real debt disappear. What it does is force whoever’s chasing you to actually back up what they’re claiming before they can keep going — genuinely useful when the debt sounds unfamiliar, was already paid, is past your state’s deadline to sue, or has bounced between so many debt buyers the paperwork’s a mess.

Timing matters here: send it within 30 days of their first written notice, and you get the automatic pause on collection. Send it later, and it’s still worth doing, but you lose that automatic protection.

Frequently asked

Does sending a debt validation letter stop collection calls?
It stops written collection contact and credit-bureau reporting on that amount until the collector validates the debt — but only if you send it within 30 days of their first written notice, and you should send it in a way that proves it was delivered.
What happens if the collector can't validate the debt?
They're required to stop collecting on that debt. It doesn't erase what you owe, but they legally can't keep pursuing it without producing proof.