Debt Collection Rights
Written in plain language for general understanding. This is educational content, not legal advice. Based on UK Acts of Parliament, statutory instruments, and official guidance.
What is this right?
If you owe money, you still have rights. Debt collectors (and creditors) must treat you fairly and follow strict rules:
- They must not harass, threaten, or mislead you
- They must not contact you at unreasonable times or with unreasonable frequency
- They must not pressure you to pay more than you can afford
- They must give you written notice (a default notice) before taking action on most regulated credit agreements — giving you 14 days to pay
A debt becomes "statute-barred" under the Limitation Act 1980 if 6 years pass (5 in Scotland) since you last acknowledged the debt or made a payment. After this, the creditor cannot take you to court for it.
When does it apply?
- Someone is chasing you for money — a credit card debt, loan, utility bill, or other obligation.
- Debt collectors must be authorised by the FCA — check the Financial Services Register.
- Bailiffs (enforcement agents) can only visit if they have a court order or are collecting certain debts (council tax, fines, HMRC). They have specific rules about what they can take and when they can visit.
- If you're in serious financial difficulty, a breathing space (Debt Respite Scheme) gives you 60 days' protection from creditor action while you get advice.
What should you do?
- Don't ignore debts — they rarely go away. Contact a free debt advice service: StepChange (0800 138 1111), National Debtline (0808 808 4000), or Citizens Advice.
- Ask the creditor to prove the debt exists — request a copy of the credit agreement (under s.78 of the Consumer Credit Act). They must provide it.
- If you can't pay in full, propose a repayment plan based on what you can afford.
- If the debt is statute-barred, write to the creditor stating this and asking them to stop contacting you.
- If a debt collector is harassing you, complain to the FCA or the Financial Ombudsman Service.
What should you NOT do?
- Don't make a payment or acknowledge a statute-barred debt — this can restart the clock.
- Don't let bailiffs into your home unless they have a court warrant for your arrest or are collecting criminal fines. For most debts, they cannot force entry on their first visit.
- Don't take out more credit to pay off existing debts without getting advice — this can spiral.
How Scotland differs from UK national law
Key differences for debt in Scotland:
- The limitation period is 5 years (not 6 as in England & Wales) under the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973.
- Crucially, after 5 years the debt is fully extinguished — not merely unenforceable. The debt ceases to exist entirely.
- Scotland has Sheriff Officers (not bailiffs) who enforce court decrees. They operate under different rules.
- The Debt Arrangement Scheme (DAS) is a Scottish statutory repayment programme that freezes interest and charges while you pay off debts.
Additional Steps in Scotland
- Contact Citizens Advice Scotland or the Accountant in Bankruptcy (aib.gov.uk) for free debt advice.
Relevant Law: Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973; Debt Arrangement and Attachment (Scotland) Act 2002
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