Florida consumers facing debt-collection lawsuits have powerful defenses — federal FDCPA, state consumer protection laws, statutes of limitations, and proof requirements that collectors often can't meet.
Published May 9, 2026
## Debt-collection defense in Florida
Most debt-collection lawsuits result in default judgments because consumers don't appear or fight. **This is a mistake** — consumers have strong defenses, and many lawsuits are won by defendants who simply show up and require collectors to prove their case.
## Federal protections
**1. Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA, 1977):**
- Prohibits abusive collection tactics
- Applies to third-party collectors (not original creditors)
- Specific banned conduct (harassment, false threats, etc.)
- Right to validation of debt
- Right to sue for violations
**2. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB):**
- Federal regulator
- Reg F (debt collection rules)
- Enforcement against major collectors
- Consumer complaint database
**3. Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA):**
- Disputes credit-reporting issues
- Inaccurate reporting → damages
- Investigation requirements
**4. Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA):**
- Robocall + autodialer restrictions
- Statutory damages ($500-$1,500/violation)
- Strong leverage in collection cases
## State consumer-protection laws
**${s.name} likely has:**
- ${s.name} consumer protection / unfair trade practices act
- ${s.name} debt collection statutes (often parallel FDCPA)
- ${s.name} usury laws
- State licensing requirements for collectors
- ${s.name}-specific harassment provisions
Often **stronger remedies** than federal: treble damages, attorney's fees, statutory penalties.
## Step 1 — get the lawsuit + ANSWER
**Critical first step:** Don't ignore the lawsuit.
**Default judgment** = automatic loss → wage garnishment + bank levies + property liens.
**File answer within deadline:**
- Typically 20-30 days from service
- Each ${s.name} county may have specific rules
- Use court-provided form if available
- Generally deny everything (force collector to prove)
- Add affirmative defenses
- Demand jury trial (sometimes)
## Common collector proof failures
**Many collection cases fail because collector can't prove:**
**1. Standing / chain of assignment:**
- Original creditor sold to debt buyer
- Sold again to second debt buyer
- Each transfer needs documentation
- Often missing pieces
**2. Original contract / agreement:**
- Card / loan agreement signed by you
- Specific terms applied
- Often impossible to produce
**3. Account statements / accuracy:**
- Complete payment history
- Accurate balance calculation
- Interest rate documentation
**4. Identity / debt amount:**
- That YOU are the actual debtor
- That amount claimed is accurate
- That fees are authorized
**Demand documentation = often results in dismissal.**
## Affirmative defenses
**1. Statute of limitations:**
- Each state has limit on lawsuit timing
- Credit card: typically 3-6 years
- Written contract: typically 4-10 years
- Open account: typically 3-6 years
- ${s.name} has specific deadlines
- Date of last activity matters
- Reaffirming debt may restart clock
- Some states: collector can't even SUE on time-barred debt (zombie debt)
**2. Identity theft:**
- Not your debt
- Police report + FTC affidavit
- Credit bureau dispute
**3. Lack of standing:**
- Plaintiff didn't actually own debt
- Chain of assignment broken
- Forced to prove ownership
**4. Improper service:**
- Not actually served properly
- Service on wrong person
- Timing defects
**5. Discharge in bankruptcy:**
- Debt previously discharged
- Order needed
**6. Settlement / accord and satisfaction:**
- Already settled
- Documentation needed
**7. Failure to mitigate damages:**
- Collector failed to minimize losses
- Limited applicability
**8. Credit card defenses:**
- Improper interest / fees
- Statement violations
- Account opened fraudulently
**9. Usury:**
- Excessive interest rate
- ${s.name} usury law
- Federal preemption issues
**10. UCC defenses (loans):**
- Notice violations
- Repossession improprieties
- Resale calculations
## Counterclaims
**Don't just defend — COUNTERSUE for collector violations:**
**FDCPA violations:**
- $1,000 statutory damages + actual damages + attorney's fees
- Per consumer (not per violation, but multiple consumers possible)
- Even minor violations actionable
**Common FDCPA violations:**
- Failure to validate debt
- False statements about debt amount
- False threats of legal action
- Calling work after told not to
- Calling before 8AM / after 9PM
- Discussing debt with third parties
- Failing to identify as debt collector
- Misrepresenting consequences of non-payment
- Suing on time-barred debt (some courts)
- Not licensed (where required)
**State law violations:**
- ${s.name} consumer protection / debt collection violations
- Often more remedies (treble damages, penalties)
- Plus attorney's fees
**TCPA violations:**
- $500-$1,500 per call/text
- Robocalls without consent
- Calls to cell phones
- Adds up quickly
**Multiple counterclaims often exceed original debt.**
## Discovery process
**Force collector to produce:**
- Original signed agreement
- Complete chain of assignment
- All bills of sale
- Account statements
- Payment history
- Affidavits / declarations
- All communication records
**Common discovery problems for collectors:**
- Records not actually produced
- Affidavits unsigned / unsworn
- Chain documentation missing
- "Robo-signed" affidavits
- Hearsay issues
## Trial and motion practice
**Motion to dismiss:**
- Pleading defects
- Standing issues
- Sometimes effective early
**Motion for summary judgment:**
- After discovery
- No genuine issues of fact
- Push collector to prove case
**Trial:**
- Bench / jury trial
- Hearsay rules apply
- Often can defeat collector's case
## Settlement strategies
**Once defended, leverage shifts:**
- Collectors prefer to settle
- Often settle for less than asking
- Lump-sum settlements common
- Payment plans possible
- Negotiate "deletion" from credit report
**Settlement principles:**
- Get agreement IN WRITING before payment
- Insist on full release
- Insist on credit reporting changes
- Cashier's check / wire (don't share account info)
- Confidentiality usually OK
## Garnishment + bank levies
**If judgment entered:**
- Wage garnishment (federal limits + state limits)
- Bank account levies
- Property liens
- Property seizure (rare for unsecured)
**Exemptions ${s.name}-specific:**
- Specific income amounts protected
- Public benefits protected (federal)
- Specific property exempt
- Head-of-household protections sometimes
- Bank-account protections
## Bankruptcy as nuclear option
**If judgment + ongoing collection issues:**
- Chapter 7 discharges most consumer debt
- Chapter 13 manages payments + protects assets
- Automatic stay stops collection
- Strategic timing often beneficial
- Costs $1,500-$5,000 typical
**Often better than fighting endless collection.**
## Common mistakes
- **Ignoring lawsuits** (default judgment automatic)
- **Admitting debt** in conversation
- **Making partial payments** (may restart SOL)
- **Talking to collectors** without legal advice
- **Confirming address / SSN** to validate identity
- **Settling without writing** before paying
- **Not requesting validation** in writing
- **Going past deadline to answer**
- **Not preserving harassment evidence**
## What you should do
If you've been sued for a debt in Florida: ANSWER the lawsuit immediately (don't ignore!), and consult a consumer / debt-defense attorney. Many Florida consumer attorneys offer free consultations. FDCPA / TCPA / state-law counterclaims often pay attorney's fees, making representation affordable. Document everything (calls, letters). Don't pay anything without written agreement.
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*This guide is general information about federal + Florida law as of mid-2026 and is not legal advice. Debt collection cases are time-sensitive. Talk to a licensed Florida consumer attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.