WUS Debt Wire

First Collector Contact

If a debt collector just called or wrote to you for the first time, take a breath — this isn’t a lawsuit, and it isn’t the last word. It means an account got handed to collections, and the law is actually on your side more than you’d guess: the collector has to send you something in writing within five days, spelling out what you supposedly owe and how to dispute it if something’s wrong.

What is a debt collector required to tell me?

By law, that first letter has to say who they are, how much they say you owe, who the original creditor was, and that you have 30 days to dispute it. If you ask, they also have to break down the number for you — how much is the original balance, how much is interest, how much is fees. You’re allowed to ask for that breakdown, and you should if the number looks off.

There’s a newer protection worth knowing about, too: you can send a written request telling a collector exactly how you want to be contacted — only by mail, never at work, only after 6pm, whatever you need — and once they get it, they have to follow it.

Should I talk to them on the phone, or wait for it in writing?

Wait if you can. A phone call leaves no record of what either of you said, and in some states, even a casual “yeah, I know I owe that” can restart the clock on how long they’re allowed to sue you. The CFPB’s own advice is blunt about this: get it in writing.

If they call before the letter arrives, it’s fine to confirm they’ve got the right person and ask them to send the notice — and leave it there. Don’t hand over a bank account number, don’t agree to a payment plan on the spot, and don’t confirm the debt is valid. None of that helps you on a rushed phone call, and all of it can be sorted out once you’ve actually seen the paperwork.

What are my options once I know the debt is real?

Option What it does Best fit
Pay it off Closes the account for good The debt is small, confirmed, and you can afford it
Negotiate a settlement Collectors often accept 30-60% of the balance in one lump sum The debt is older, or it’s been sold to a debt buyer who paid pennies on the dollar for it
Set up a payment plan Spreads it out over time The debt is real but a lump sum isn’t realistic
Dispute it in writing Makes them prove they’ve got the right person and the right number You’re not sure the amount, or even the debt itself, is correct
Sit tight for now Buys you time to check how old the debt is You’re not sure if it’s already past your state’s legal deadline to sue

Can they call my boss, my family, or my neighbors?

They can call around to find you, but that’s it — they’re allowed to ask someone for your address or phone number, and that’s about the extent of it. They can’t tell your sister you owe money, and legally they only get one shot at contacting any given person unless the first answer they got was clearly wrong.

They also can’t call you at work once they know your employer doesn’t allow it, and they can’t call before 8am or after 9pm your time unless you’ve told them that’s fine.

Frequently asked questions

Do I have to pick up when a debt collector calls?

No. Nothing in federal law says you have to answer or talk it out over the phone. Let it go to voicemail, wait for the written notice, and respond in writing — it’s slower, but it puts everything on paper, which protects you.

Will they sue me right after this first call?

Almost never that fast. A lawsuit means actually filing paperwork in court, which costs the collector time and money, so most try to work something out first. That said, going silent and ignoring it entirely does raise the odds it eventually gets there.

What if I just don’t respond at all?

The debt doesn’t disappear — it just keeps moving. They can keep calling, report it to the credit bureaus, sell it to another collector, or eventually sue. Even just sending a validation request puts you back in control of what happens next.

Can they really not call before 8am or after 9pm?

That one’s true — it’s written directly into federal law. If they’re calling outside that window without your okay, that’s a violation you can report to the CFPB, and it can even be worth money to you if it happened repeatedly.

Related glossary terms

First Collector Contact by state (launch coverage)