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Contributing Expert: Michael A. Ziegler, Esq., Founding Partner, Ziegler Diamond Law · Florida Bar No. 74864

Last Updated: June 2026 Consumer Debt Law

Statute of Limitations on Consumer Debt: What Every Borrower Should Know Before Paying, Pleading, or Ignoring

The statute of limitations on consumer debt is one of the most misunderstood concepts in personal finance. It is also one of the most powerful defenses available to a borrower sued on old debt, when it applies. This is a practical framework for understanding how it works, when it varies, and what to do, and what not to do, when an old debt resurfaces. If you are currently dealing with debt collection and want to understand your options, see CuraDebt’s full overview of debt relief options.

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Why a Statute of Limitations Exists at All

State and federal legislatures have decided, for nearly every type of civil claim, that a plaintiff has only a limited window to file suit. The policy reasons are practical: evidence gets worse, witnesses move or die, and people deserve to move forward after enough time passes. If a creditor sat on its right to collect for many years while you reorganized your finances around the belief that the debt was gone, the law treats that delay as a forfeiture of the claim.

Critical distinction: The statute of limitations does not erase the debt itself. The debt still exists as a moral obligation. What the statute does is take away the creditor’s ability to enforce the debt through a new lawsuit. That distinction matters because it shapes everything that follows.

A close cousin of the statute of limitations is the statute of repose, which is an absolute deadline that cannot be extended for any reason. Statutes of limitations can sometimes be extended by a payment, a written acknowledgment, discovery-rule tolling, or a contractual provision. A statute of repose, by contrast, is usually the last day a claim can ever be brought, no matter what either party did. For most consumer debt collection, you are dealing with the statute of limitations, not the statute of repose.


Why It Varies by State and by Debt Type

The same credit card account can have very different limitations periods depending on two factors.

First, which state’s law applies. Most credit card and personal-loan contracts contain a “choice of law” provision designating which state’s law governs disputes, often Delaware, Utah, or Virginia, where the issuing bank is chartered. The state where you live may not be the state whose statute of limitations applies to your contract. In some states, a borrowing statute overrides the contractual choice when its limitations period is shorter than the chosen state’s.

Second, the type of debt. Most states draw a line between:

Credit card debt is where this gets murkiest. Some states treat credit card accounts as written contracts because the cardholder agreement is in writing. Others treat them as open accounts or revolving credit with a shorter window. The answer can change the entire posture of the case.

For revolving credit, the question of when the clock starts is also contested. In most states, the clock begins running on the date of the last payment or the date of default, but courts in different jurisdictions do not always agree on which event starts it.

Case law in this area keeps changing, even on doctrines practitioners used to treat as settled. In Florida, for example, the Florida Supreme Court’s decision in Bartram v. U.S. Bank recognized that a mortgage lender that had accelerated a loan in a dismissed foreclosure case could later de-accelerate the debt and reset the limitations clock for a future lawsuit. The de-acceleration concept is mortgage-specific, but it shows a broader point: in any given state, the statute-of-limitations analysis can have moving parts that are not obvious from the statute alone.

Michael A. Ziegler, Esq., Founding Partner, Ziegler Diamond Law · Florida Bar No. 74864


What Re-Aging a Debt Means

Re-aging describes any event that restarts the statute of limitations clock on a debt that was about to expire, or that already had expired. The two most common re-aging events are:

1

Making a Payment

In most states, a partial payment on a debt restarts the limitations clock from the date of the payment. A $25 good-faith payment on a six-year-old credit card account can revive the creditor’s right to sue for the entire balance, with a fresh limitations window starting from the date of that payment.

2

A Written Acknowledgment of the Debt

In many states, a written statement acknowledging that the debt is yours and that you owe it, even without a payment, restarts the clock. Verbal acknowledgments sometimes are enough, sometimes not, depending on state law.

Why collectors ask for small payments on very old accounts: This is why collection agencies sometimes call about very old debts asking for anything you can pay today, even five dollars. The five dollars itself is not what they want. They want to restart the limitations clock so they can sue you for the full balance.

Some collectors will also re-age a debt by reporting a more recent date of last activity to the credit bureaus. That is a separate practice that violates the Fair Credit Reporting Act when the underlying date is wrong, but it can muddy the question of when the limitations clock actually started.


The Risk of Paying on a Time-Barred Debt

This is the area where well-meaning consumers do themselves the most damage. The instinct to be responsible and pay something on an old debt is exactly what some collection businesses are trying to provoke.

Before paying anything on a debt that is more than a few years old, work through this checklist:

What collectors are not required to tell you: A collector is generally not required to volunteer that a debt is time-barred. A growing number of states require disclosures in collection letters when the debt is past the statute of limitations, and the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act prohibits a collector from suing or threatening to sue on a debt the collector knows is time-barred. But neither protection guarantees the disclosure will appear in every call or letter, and neither protection helps you if you have already made the payment.

If you are trying to understand which debts may still be collectible versus which may be time-barred, reviewing your overall debt picture with a professional is the most reliable starting point. CuraDebt’s debt relief services include a free initial evaluation that can help you understand which obligations still carry legal enforcement risk.

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How to Respond If You Are Sued on Old Debt

If you are served with a lawsuit on a debt you believe is past the statute of limitations, four steps protect the defense:

1

Do Not Ignore the Summons

A default judgment entered against you will almost always survive a later statute-of-limitations challenge. The judgment becomes its own enforceable obligation with its own, typically much longer, limitations period for renewal and collection. Statute of limitations is an affirmative defense, which means you have to raise it in your formal answer. Silence forfeits it.

2

Calendar the Response Deadline Immediately

Most states give a defendant 20 to 30 days from the date of service to file an answer. Missing that deadline produces the default judgment described above.

3

Do Not Call the Collection Law Firm Before Filing Your Answer

Any conversation about the debt, including offers to pay, settlement discussions, or I just want to know what this is calls, can be used against the defense. Do not initiate contact before your answer is filed.

4

Consult a Consumer Protection Attorney Licensed in Your State

Statute-of-limitations rules are state-specific, choice-of-law rules are state-specific, and the procedural deadlines that protect the defense are state-specific. Generic legal information from the internet, no matter how well-sourced, is not a substitute for a lawyer who knows the procedural posture of your case.


One More Thing About Judgments

The statute of limitations is a defense to the filing of a new lawsuit on debt that is too old. It is not a defense to the enforcement of a judgment that was already entered. Once a creditor reduces a debt to a court judgment, that judgment is its own enforceable obligation, usually with a far longer life than the original debt. In Florida, for example, a judgment can be renewed and enforced for up to 20 years.

That distinction is why the order of operations matters so much. The defense exists at the moment the new lawsuit is filed. Once the debt becomes a judgment, because the limitations defense was waived or never raised, the defense is gone.

Two dates that matter most: If an old account shows up, the first date that matters is the date of default, not the date the collector called you. The second date that matters is your answer deadline if you are sued. Miss either one, and the collector may have a much better case than it should.

For debts that are still within the enforceable window, structured debt relief including settlement, consolidation, or a debt management plan may resolve the obligation without litigation. See CuraDebt’s debt relief options for a full breakdown of what is available based on your debt type and situation.


Expert Perspectives

The analysis below draws on commentary from Michael A. Ziegler, Esq., a Florida-licensed consumer protection attorney whose practice centers on debt collection defense and FDCPA litigation. His observations highlight why the statute of limitations analysis is rarely as straightforward as looking up a number on a chart.

Most consumers assume the statute of limitations is a simple lookup: find your state, find your debt type, count the years. But choice-of-law provisions in credit agreements mean the state whose law applies is often not the state where the borrower lives. And even within a single state, whether the clock started on the date of default or the date of the last payment is a question courts have answered differently in different fact patterns. The borrower who assumes the debt is time-barred without confirming those details may be making a very expensive assumption.

Michael A. Ziegler, Esq., Founding Partner, Ziegler Diamond Law · Florida Bar No. 74864

The cases where consumers get hurt the most are the ones where they made a small payment thinking they were doing the right thing. A $50 payment to show good faith on a six-year-old credit card account can reset the statute of limitations entirely, reviving a debt the collector had almost no legal leverage to enforce. Once the clock restarts, the full balance is back on the table with a fresh limitations window. If a consumer is not sure whether a debt is time-barred, the safest first step is to get the account documentation in writing and consult an attorney before making any payment or written acknowledgment.

Michael A. Ziegler, Esq., Founding Partner, Ziegler Diamond Law · Florida Bar No. 74864

A lot of people avoid dealing with old debt because they hope it will simply go away. Sometimes the limitations period does expire and the collector loses the right to sue. But avoidance is not a strategy because there is no way to know which outcome is coming without looking at the actual account details. The consumers who come out in the best position are the ones who get a clear picture of what they actually owe, which debts still carry legal risk, and which relief options are available to them, before a lawsuit gets filed or a payment gets made. Getting that picture costs nothing when you work with the right professional.

Michael A. Ziegler, Esq., Founding Partner, Ziegler Diamond Law · Florida Bar No. 74864


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the statute of limitations on debt? The statute of limitations is a legal deadline that limits how long a creditor has to file a lawsuit to collect a debt. After this period expires, the debt still exists but the creditor can no longer enforce it through a new court judgment. The period varies by state and by the type of debt involved.
Does paying an old debt restart the statute of limitations? In most states, yes. Making even a small partial payment on a time-barred debt restarts the statute of limitations clock from the date of that payment, reviving the creditor’s right to sue for the entire balance. This is why collection agencies sometimes request any small payment on very old accounts, even amounts as small as five dollars.
What happens if I ignore a debt collection lawsuit? If you ignore a debt lawsuit, the court will likely enter a default judgment against you. That judgment becomes its own enforceable obligation with a far longer collection period than the original debt. In Florida, for example, a judgment can be renewed and enforced for up to 20 years. The statute of limitations defense is permanently lost once a default judgment is entered.
Which state’s statute of limitations applies to my credit card debt? Most credit card and personal loan contracts contain a choice-of-law provision specifying which state’s law governs disputes. This is often the state where the issuing bank is chartered, such as Delaware, Utah, or Virginia, not necessarily the state where you live. Some states have borrowing statutes that override this choice when their limitations period is shorter. Consult a licensed attorney in your state for a definitive answer.
What is re-aging a debt and is it legal? Re-aging is any event that restarts the statute of limitations on a debt approaching or past its expiration. Legitimate re-aging occurs through a partial payment or written acknowledgment of the debt. Illegitimate re-aging occurs when collectors report a more recent date of last activity to credit bureaus than the actual date, which violates the Fair Credit Reporting Act. If you suspect illegitimate re-aging, consult a consumer protection attorney.
Can a collector sue me after the statute of limitations has expired? The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act prohibits collectors from suing or threatening to sue on a debt they know is time-barred. However, not all collectors follow this rule, and the burden of raising the statute of limitations as a defense falls on you, not the court. If you are served with a lawsuit, you must respond and raise the defense in your formal answer within the required timeframe or it is waived.
If the statute of limitations has passed, do I still owe the debt? Yes. The statute of limitations removes the creditor’s ability to enforce the debt through a new lawsuit. It does not cancel the debt itself. The debt still exists as an obligation, and it may still appear on your credit report for up to seven years from the original date of delinquency under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, regardless of the limitations period.

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Legal Disclaimer: This article is general legal information and not legal advice for any specific situation. Statute-of-limitations issues are state-specific and fact-specific. Consult an attorney licensed in your state if you are facing collection on old debt. CuraDebt Systems LLC is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. CuraDebt is a debt relief company. Results vary based on individual circumstances. Not all debts are eligible for settlement. Debt settlement may affect credit scores. CuraDebt is a member of the Association for Consumer Debt Relief (ACDR), BBB A+ Rated and Accredited.
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About Michael A. Ziegler, Esq.

Michael A. Ziegler is a Florida-licensed consumer protection attorney (Florida Bar No. 74864) and the Founding Partner of Ziegler Diamond Law in Clearwater, Florida. His practice focuses on debt collection defense, Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and Florida Consumer Collection Practices Act cases, and consumer bankruptcy. This article is general legal information and does not constitute legal advice for any specific situation.

Florida Bar No. 74864 Consumer Protection Law FDCPA Defense Ziegler Diamond Law Clearwater, FL