If debt collectors are calling you, sending letters, or reporting to the credit bureaus, you have powerful federal protections under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) — 15 U.S.C. § 1692. I'm Rick Jefferson, and here's what every ITIN holder needs to know about their rights against collectors.

What the FDCPA Prohibits

  • Calling before 8am or after 9pm
  • Calling your workplace after you’ve told them to stop
  • Using profane, abusive, or threatening language
  • Threatening legal action they don’t intend to take
  • Discussing your debt with third parties (neighbors, family, coworkers)
  • Misrepresenting the amount owed
  • Adding unauthorized fees, interest, or charges
  • Threatening to report you to immigration (this is both an FDCPA and ECOA violation)

Your Debt Validation Rights (§1692g)

Within 5 days of first contacting you, the collector must send a written validation notice including the amount owed, the name of the original creditor, and a statement of your dispute rights. You then have 30 days to request full validation. During this period, collection must stop until validation is provided.

If they can't validate — the debt is unenforceable and must be removed from your credit report.

The Cease and Desist Letter

Under FDCPA §1692c, you can send a written cease and desist letter demanding the collector stop all communication. After receiving this letter, they can only contact you to:

  • Acknowledge receipt of your letter
  • Notify you of a specific action they intend to take (like filing a lawsuit)

They cannot call, text, email, or send collection letters. This is particularly valuable for ITIN holders being harassed by aggressive collectors.

FDCPA Violations = Removal Leverage

When a collector violates the FDCPA, you gain leverage for credit report removal. We document every violation and use it in negotiations: "Remove this item from our client's credit report, or we will file a formal complaint with the CFPB and pursue damages under FDCPA §1692k."

Damages under the FDCPA include:

  • Actual damages (financial losses from the violation)
  • Statutory damages up to $1,000 per lawsuit
  • Attorney fees and costs
  • Class action damages up to $500,000

"Collectors prey on fear and ignorance. When you know your FDCPA rights, the power dynamic flips completely. Document everything, validate everything, and never let a collector intimidate you."

— Rick Jefferson