Debt Validation

Debt Validation Letter: How to Demand Proof of Debt

Your complete guide to debt validation letters under the FDCPA. Learn when and how to demand proof that a debt collector actually has the right to collect from you.

F
FixMyCredit99 Team
(Updated November 20, 2024)
10 min read

Debt Validation Quick Facts

  • Time limit: 30 days from first contact for strongest protection
  • Your right: Guaranteed under the FDCPA (federal law)
  • Cost: Free—just send via certified mail
  • Success rate: Many collectors can't fully validate old debts

What Is Debt Validation?

Debt validation is your legal right to demand proof that a debt collector has the authority to collect a debt from you. Under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), collectors must be able to prove:

  • The debt actually exists
  • You are the person who owes it
  • The amount they claim is correct
  • They have the legal right to collect it
41%
of debts sold to collectors have errors in the amount owed

This isn't just a technicality. According to Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) research, debt collectors frequently pursue debts with incorrect amounts, wrong account information, or debts that don't belong to the person being contacted.

Why Validation Matters

Debts are often sold multiple times between collectors. Each time, information can be lost or corrupted. A debt validation letter forces the collector to prove they have accurate documentation—which many cannot provide.

Your Rights Under the FDCPA

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act provides specific protections when you request debt validation:

30
Days to request validation
100%
Collection must stop during validation
$1,000
Damages per FDCPA violation
Free
To send validation request

Section 809 of the FDCPA States:

"If the consumer notifies the debt collector in writing within the thirty-day period... that the debt, or any portion thereof, is disputed... the debt collector shall cease collection of the debt... until the debt collector obtains verification of the debt."

In plain English: If you send a written validation request within 30 days of first contact, the collector must stop all collection activity until they provide proof.

Benefits of Debt Validation

Pros

  • Forces collector to prove they have the right to collect
  • Stops collection calls and letters (if within 30 days)
  • Can reveal errors in the amount owed
  • May result in debt being dropped entirely
  • Protects you from paying debts you don't owe
  • Creates paper trail if they violate your rights

Cons

  • Must be sent in writing (not over phone)
  • Strongest protection only within first 30 days
  • Doesn't make legitimate debts disappear
  • Some collectors do have proper documentation

Need help with a debt collector?

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When to Send a Debt Validation Letter

Timing is crucial for debt validation. Here's when you should send a validation request:

Optimal Timing for Debt Validation

Day 1

Collector Makes First Contact

They must send you a written notice within 5 days with debt details.
Days 1-30

Critical Window

Send your validation letter NOW. This triggers the strongest protections—all collection must stop.
After 30 Days

You Can Still Request

You can still request validation, but collector can continue collection while validating.

Don't Wait!

The 30-day clock starts from the collector's first communication. Don't call them back or engage—just send your validation letter via certified mail immediately.

Always Request Validation When:

  • You don't recognize the debt
  • The amount seems wrong
  • The debt is very old (check statute of limitations)
  • You've already paid this debt
  • You suspect identity theft
  • The original creditor name doesn't match your records

What to Include in Your Validation Letter

Your debt validation letter should request specific information. Under the FDCPA and related case law, you can request:

  1. Account Documentation

    • Complete payment history
    • Original signed agreement (if they have it)
    • Documentation of how they calculated the current balance
  2. Chain of Ownership

    • Name of original creditor
    • Documentation showing they purchased/own the debt
    • Assignment or bill of sale
  3. Verification of Your Identity

    • Proof that YOU are the person who owes this debt
    • Your name, address, and account number on original documents
  4. Licensing Information

    • Their license to collect in your state
    • Registered agent in your state

Sample FDCPA Debt Validation Letter

Sample Letter

[Your Name]

[Your Address]

[City, State ZIP]

[Date]

[Collector Name]

[Collector Address]

Re: Validation of Debt

Account Number: [Number from their letter]

Dear Sir or Madam,

I am responding to your contact about a debt you claim I owe. I am requesting validation of this debt pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1692g...

See the full 20+ line letter with your personalized details

Generate Your Letter

What Happens After You Send It

After sending your validation letter via certified mail, here's what to expect:

If Sent Within 30 Days

The collector must immediately stop all collection activity—no calls, no letters, no credit reporting—until they provide written validation. This is federal law.

Possible Outcomes:

1. They Provide Full Validation

If they send complete documentation proving the debt, you'll need to decide whether to pay, negotiate, or continue disputing specific errors in their documentation.

2. They Provide Incomplete Validation

Many collectors send a computer printout or just restate what they already told you. This is NOT proper validation. You can send a follow-up letter noting the deficiencies.

3. They Don't Respond

If they fail to validate but continue collection, they're violating the FDCPA. You may have grounds for a lawsuit. Contact a consumer law attorney.

4. They Drop the Debt

Sometimes collectors simply stop pursuing debts they can't validate. If the debt was on your credit report, request removal by disputing with the bureaus.

Know Your Rights

If a collector violates the FDCPA, you can sue for up to $1,000 in statutory damages plus actual damages and attorney fees. The CFPB accepts complaints about debt collector misconduct.

Generate Your Debt Validation Letter

Our system creates a comprehensive debt validation letter citing all relevant FDCPA provisions. We even mail it via certified mail for you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Under the FDCPA, you have 30 days from the debt collector's first contact to request validation. If you request within this window, they must stop collection until they provide validation.
Yes, you can request validation at any time. However, after 30 days, the collector isn't required to stop collection activities while validating. They still must provide validation if requested.
If they can't validate the debt, they must stop collecting and cannot report it to credit bureaus. If they already reported it, they should remove it.
If sent within 30 days, the collector must stop all collection activity (including calls) until they provide written validation. After 30 days, they can continue calling while validating.
If the collector can't validate the debt, they shouldn't be reporting it to credit bureaus. You can then dispute the item with the bureaus, referencing the collector's failure to validate.

Additional Resources

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