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Sued for Debt in Maine? Here's What to Do Next

A Maine debt-collection lawsuit gives you 20 days to file an Answer. Below: your deadline, statute-of-limitations rules, garnishment protections, the state consumer-protection laws on your side, and FAQs grounded in Maine statutes and court rules.

Response Deadline: 20 Days

You have 20 days from the date you are served to file your Answer with the Maine court. Missing this deadline results in an automatic default judgment against you.

Debt Collection in Maine: Who Gets Complained About

In the last 24 months, 400 Maine residents filed CFPB complaints against the top debt collectors and credit card issuers tracked here. The most-complained-about in Maine:

  1. 1 Capital One — 90 Maine complaints
  2. 2 Citibank / Citi — 61 Maine complaints
  3. 3 Synchrony Bank — 42 Maine complaints

Source: CFPB Consumer Complaint Database , 24-month rolling window. If you were sued by one of these companies in Maine, read the linked page for state-specific defenses.

Statute of Limitations in Maine

Debt Type Years
Credit Card 6
Medical Debt 6
Auto Loan / Deficiency 6
Personal Loan 6
Written Contract 6
Oral Contract 6

The statute of limitations is measured from the date of your last payment or activity on the account. If the SOL has expired, the debt is time-barred and you have a strong affirmative defense — but you must raise it in your Answer; the court will not do it for you.

Wage Garnishment in Maine

Wage garnishment is allowed — up to 25% of disposable earnings

Federal limits apply. Maine provides additional protections for public assistance recipients.

Court System in Maine

Small claims limit $6,000. District and superior courts handle larger civil cases.

Filing fees: $50-$250

Where the Case Can Be Filed

Federal FDCPA § 1692i requires suit in the judicial district where the consumer signed the contract or currently lives. In Maine, civil collection actions are filed in District Court or Superior Court based on the county where you live or where the contract was signed. Small Claims Court handles claims up to $6,000 under 14 M.R.S. § 7482, and consumer-defendants often see junk-debt suits filed in that forum.

Maine's Debt Collection Statute

Maine Fair Debt Collection Practices Act

9-A M.R.S. § 5-116 (Maine Consumer Credit Code, Article 5, Part 1)

Maine's state little-FDCPA is part of the Maine Consumer Credit Code (Title 9-A). It tracks the federal FDCPA but applies more broadly to anyone collecting a Maine consumer debt, including some original creditors that federal law exempts. Collection agencies and debt buyers must be licensed by the Maine Bureau of Consumer Credit Protection (9-A M.R.S. § 11-301 et seq.). Unlicensed collection activity is itself a violation. Maine has a 6-year statute of limitations on most contract and open-account debt under 14 M.R.S. § 752, longer than many states.

Maine-Specific Protections Beyond the Federal FDCPA

Maine requires collection agencies and debt buyers to be licensed by the Bureau of Consumer Credit Protection (9-A M.R.S. § 11-301). Unlicensed collection activity is a violation that can void the debt and trigger penalties. The Maine FDCPA applies more broadly than federal law - in some cases reaching original creditors federal law exempts. Maine also has a 6-year SOL (14 M.R.S. § 752) but its strong licensing scheme and active Bureau enforcement give consumers leverage federal law alone does not.

Common Debt-Collection Patterns in Maine

Maine sees collection activity heavily concentrated in old credit-card debt and medical debt, especially after rural hospital consolidations. Junk-debt buyers like Midland and Portfolio Recovery file routinely in Maine District Court. Because Maine requires collection-agency licensing and aggressively enforces it, unlicensed out-of-state collectors who contact Maine consumers often expose themselves to state penalties on top of any federal FDCPA claims.

File a Complaint with the Maine Attorney General

Office of the Maine Attorney General

Consumer Protection Division

You can file complaints about debt collectors with the Maine Attorney General's consumer protection division. State enforcement is in addition to your federal FDCPA rights and your right to sue under Maine Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.

Maine Consumer Protection Law

Maine Unfair Trade Practices Act

In addition to the federal FDCPA, Maine has its own consumer protection law that may provide additional rights and remedies against debt collectors. Violations of state law can carry additional statutory damages, attorney fees, and in some jurisdictions treble or punitive damages — read the FAQs below for the specifics.

How a Maine Debt Lawsuit Typically Moves

  1. Service of process. A process server or sheriff hands you the summons and complaint. The 20-day clock starts from this date.
  2. File an Answer. Within 20 days, file a written Answer with the Maine court. Deny disputed allegations, raise affirmative defenses (statute of limitations, lack of standing, incorrect amount), and demand proof of the debt. Missing this step is the #1 way consumers lose.
  3. Discovery + motions. Both sides exchange documents. Many debt-buyer cases collapse here because the plaintiff cannot produce the chain-of-title documents proving they own your specific account.
  4. Settlement or trial. Most cases settle. If yours doesn't, Maine courts decide on the documents and live testimony.
  5. If a judgment is entered. See the wage-garnishment and exemption sections above for what a collector can and cannot do in Maine.

FAQ: Debt Lawsuits in Maine

How long to respond in Maine?

20 days from service.

What is the SOL in Maine?

6 years for all contract types.

Can wages be garnished?

Yes. Federal limits apply.

Where are debt cases filed?

Small claims up to $6,000. District court for larger amounts.

Does the collector contacting me need a Maine license?

Almost certainly yes. Under 9-A M.R.S. § 11-301, any "debt collector" - including collection agencies and debt buyers - that collects or attempts to collect debts from Maine consumers must be licensed by the Maine Bureau of Consumer Credit Protection. Original creditors collecting their own debts in their own name are generally exempt, but everyone else needs a license. You can verify whether a collector is licensed by searching the Bureau's licensee database or calling (207) 624-8527. If the collector contacting you is not licensed in Maine, that is a significant violation - the Bureau can take administrative action, and the unlicensed status may give you defenses to the debt itself. Collectors who file suit without proper licensing may have their cases dismissed. Always check licensing before paying any out-of-state collector. If you find one is unlicensed, file a complaint with the Bureau and document the contacts - that documentation supports both administrative complaints and FDCPA counterclaims.

What is the statute of limitations on debt in Maine?

Maine's general statute of limitations on contract and open-account debt is 6 years under 14 M.R.S. § 752. That covers most credit-card debt, store-card debt, and personal loans. Debt under a sealed instrument has a 20-year SOL under 14 M.R.S. § 751, but consumer debt rarely qualifies. Maine's 6-year window is longer than many states, so collectors and debt buyers in Maine often have a wider opportunity to sue. The clock generally runs from the date of last payment or last activity on the account, and is not restarted by partial payments unless the consumer signs a new written acknowledgment. Do not make payments or sign payment plans on an old debt without first confirming when the SOL ran. If a collector sues you on a time-barred debt and you raise the SOL as an affirmative defense, the court should dismiss the case. Failing to raise the defense in your answer can waive it.

Can I sue a collector under Maine's debt-collection law?

Yes. Maine's debt-collection law (9-A M.R.S. § 5-116 and related provisions) gives consumers a private right of action for violations, similar to the federal FDCPA. You can recover actual damages, statutory penalties, and reasonable attorney's fees. Many Maine consumer attorneys handle these cases on a fee-shifting basis - if you win, the collector pays your attorney, so you typically pay nothing out of pocket. Combined claims under the federal FDCPA (15 U.S.C. § 1692k - up to $1,000 statutory damages) and Maine's state law often produce stronger leverage than either alone. Common Maine violations include collecting without a state license, calling at unreasonable hours, misrepresenting the amount or status of the debt, threatening suit on time-barred debts, and contacting you after you have requested they stop. Document everything: keep voicemails, save letters and texts, and write down the date and time of every call. Then file a complaint with the Bureau of Consumer Credit Protection and consider consulting a consumer-law attorney.

What if a Maine hospital sends my bill to collections?

Medical debt is one of the most common debt types Maine consumers face, and it has some specific protections. Maine has adopted several protections aligned with federal CFPB Regulation F (12 CFR Part 1006) and federal No Surprises Act rules around emergency-room billing. Once a medical debt is sent to collections, all the standard FDCPA protections apply, plus Maine's state law. You can demand written validation under FDCPA § 1692g within 30 days of the first communication, and the collector must stop collection until they validate. As of recent CFPB and major-credit-bureau changes, paid medical collections must be removed from credit reports, medical debts under $500 cannot be reported, and unpaid medical collections only appear after a one-year delay. If your insurance was supposed to cover the bill, demand the collector confirm with the hospital before paying. And check whether the hospital offered you charity care or financial assistance - many Maine hospitals are required to offer it under federal 501(r) rules, and refusing or failing to disclose those programs can be grounds to dispute the debt.

Can a collector freeze my Maine bank account?

Not without first suing you, winning a judgment, and obtaining a writ of execution or trustee process under 14 M.R.S. § 3127 et seq. (Maine's trustee-process statute). If a Maine judgment is entered against you and you do not pay, the creditor can serve a trustee process on your bank to freeze and seize funds. However, certain funds are exempt by law: Social Security, SSI, VA benefits, unemployment compensation, public assistance, and child support cannot be taken for most consumer debt. Federal regulation (31 CFR Part 212) requires banks to automatically protect two months of federal-benefit deposits in your account. Maine also exempts a portion of wages already deposited from execution. If your bank account is frozen, file a claim of exemption with the court immediately - usually you have 20 days under Maine rules. Bring proof of the source of funds (Social Security award letter, VA letter, etc.). A Maine consumer attorney can usually get exempt funds released quickly, often at no cost to you because of fee-shifting under the federal FDCPA.

This page summarizes public information from the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database, the FDCPA, and Maine state law (statutes, civil procedure rules, and court structure). It is not legal advice. Statutes and court rules change — consult a licensed attorney in Maine for guidance on your specific case.

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