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Is National Debt Relief Legit?

National Debt Relief has been around since 2009, is based in New York, and carries accreditation from the American Fair Credit Council and the International Association of Professional Debt Arbitrators, plus an A+ rating from the Better Business Bureau. It’s a real, licensed debt settlement company — not a scam that takes your money and disappears. But debt settlement as a category comes with real costs and real risk, and those apply to NDR the same as they’d apply to any settlement company, whether or not their marketing page leads with that.

Like every legitimate settlement company, NDR legally can’t charge you a fee until it’s actually settled a debt and you’ve made a payment under the new terms — that’s the FTC’s Telemarketing Sales Rule, not a company policy. Its published fees run 15% to 25% of what you enroll. The way enrollment works, you stop paying creditors directly and instead save into a dedicated account, which means your credit score will likely take a hit, and some accounts could still end up in collections or even get sued before a settlement is reached. That’s true of how debt settlement works in general — it’s not something specific to NDR.

If you’re weighing complaint volume in the CFPB’s database, look at it relative to how many clients NDR actually has — check the live complaint lookup linked below rather than reading a raw number in isolation. The complaint pattern that shows up most across this entire industry, NDR included, is the gap between what the marketing promises (debt cut by a certain percentage) and the reality that not every account settles, plus the surprise of owing taxes on whatever gets forgiven.

Pros

  • No upfront fee — that's actually required by federal law, and NDR's own fee disclosures reflect it correctly.
  • A+ rating and accreditation from the BBB, AFCC, and IAPDA, though most of its direct competitors hold the same credentials.
  • Free consultation with no obligation to enroll after you get an estimate.

Cons

  • Not every debt you enroll is guaranteed to settle — some creditors refuse to negotiate, and a few may sue you while you're still enrolled.
  • Your credit score will likely drop further during the program before it recovers.
  • Forgiven debt over $600 generally counts as taxable income to the IRS via Form 1099-C.
  • Settlement isn't the cheapest option for everyone — check nonprofit credit counseling and your Chapter 7 eligibility first.

Verdict

National Debt Relief is a real, accredited debt settlement company — not a scam. But "legitimate" and "right for your situation" are two different questions. Compare its fees and timeline against nonprofit credit counseling and your Chapter 7 eligibility before signing anything, and check its current CFPB complaint record for your state first.

Ready to talk to National Debt Relief?

A free consultation costs you nothing and doesn't commit you to anything — it's a reasonable next step even if you're still comparing options. No upfront fees, by law.

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