Fake 'debt collectors' threaten arrest over debts you don't owe — while real collectors must follow strict rules. Paste the letter for an instant read: legitimate, questionable, or likely scam.
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How to tell a real debt collector letter from a fake
A legitimate US debt-collection communication (under the FDCPA and CFPB Regulation F) must state the amount, name the creditor owed (ideally the original creditor), give an itemization or reference date, spell out your validation rights (you can dispute within 30 days and demand verification), and identify the collector with real contact info. A real collector also can't have you arrested for a debt.
Red flags
Threatens arrest, jail, or 'we'll send police' over a debt (collectors can't do that).
Demands payment by gift card, wire, crypto, or prepaid card.
Refuses to name the original creditor or give you validation info.
'Final notice — pay within 24 hours' pressure, or a debt you don't recognize (phantom debt).
Asks for your full SSN or bank login.
What to do
Paste the letter above to see which required FDCPA elements are missing.
Within 30 days, send a written debt-validation request — the collector must then prove the amount, the original creditor, and that you owe it, and pause collection until they do.
Never pay by gift card or wire, and don't give SSN/bank details to an unverified caller.
Report abusive or scam collectors to the CFPB and your state attorney general.
FAQ
How do I know if a debt collector is legitimate?
A real collector states the amount and the creditor, gives an itemization, and tells you your validation rights — and never threatens arrest or demands gift cards. Send a written validation request within 30 days to make them prove the debt. Paste the letter above to see what's missing.
Can a debt collector have me arrested?
No. You cannot be arrested for owing a consumer debt, and no legitimate collector threatens jail or police over one. That threat is a hallmark of a scam or an FDCPA violation.