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

A Nebraska debt-collection lawsuit gives you 30 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 Nebraska statutes and court rules.

Response Deadline: 30 Days

You have 30 days from the date you are served to file your Answer with the Nebraska court. Missing this deadline results in an automatic default judgment against you.

Debt Collection in Nebraska: Who Gets Complained About

In the last 24 months, 783 Nebraska residents filed CFPB complaints against the top debt collectors and credit card issuers tracked here. The most-complained-about in Nebraska:

  1. 1 LVNV Funding LLC — 175 Nebraska complaints
  2. 2 Capital One — 141 Nebraska complaints
  3. 3 Portfolio Recovery Associates — 63 Nebraska complaints

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

Statute of Limitations in Nebraska

Debt Type Years
Credit Card 5
Medical Debt 5
Auto Loan / Deficiency 5
Personal Loan 5
Written Contract 5
Oral Contract 4

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 Nebraska

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

Greater of 75% of disposable earnings or 30x federal minimum wage exempt. Head of household gets 85% exemption.

Court System in Nebraska

Small claims limit $3,600. County court handles most civil cases up to $57,000.

Filing fees: $25-$250

Where the Case Can Be Filed

Federal FDCPA venue (15 U.S.C. § 1692i) requires a collector to sue in the judicial district where the consumer signed the contract or where the consumer currently resides. Nebraska venue rules generally require suit in the county of the defendant's residence at the time of filing, with limited exceptions for actions on contracts performed in another county. Small claims actions up to $3,900 are handled by the County Court small claims division; larger consumer debt cases proceed in County Court (up to $57,000) or District Court.

Nebraska's Debt Collection Statute

Nebraska Consumer Protection Act; Collection Agency Act

Neb. Rev. Stat. § 87-302 (UDAP); § 45-601 et seq. (Collection Agency Act)

Nebraska's Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act and the broader Consumer Protection Act prohibit unfair or deceptive practices in trade and commerce, reaching collection abuses by both original creditors and third-party collectors. The Nebraska Collection Agency Act, § 45-601 et seq., requires collection agencies to register and post a bond, and authorizes administrative discipline for violations. Together they supplement the federal FDCPA and allow consumers to recover actual damages plus, in appropriate cases, treble damages and attorney fees.

Nebraska-Specific Protections Beyond the Federal FDCPA

Nebraska's wage garnishment cap is more protective than the federal floor for heads of household: a head of household keeps 85 percent of disposable earnings instead of the federal 75 percent (Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1558). The Collection Agency Act requires bonding and registration, and consumers can challenge an unregistered collector's standing. Nebraska homestead exemption protects up to $60,000 of equity in a primary residence under § 40-101.

Common Debt-Collection Patterns in Nebraska

Credit-card charge-offs sold to national debt buyers drive most of the Nebraska collection docket, with Midland and Portfolio Recovery filing heavy volume in Douglas, Lancaster, and Sarpy County Courts. Medical debt from regional health systems and rural hospitals is a strong second category, frequently sold to specialty medical-debt buyers. Payday and high-cost installment loans originated through licensed Nebraska delayed-deposit lenders generate a steady stream of small-balance collection suits.

File a Complaint with the Nebraska Attorney General

Nebraska Attorney General

Consumer Protection Division

You can file complaints about debt collectors with the Nebraska Attorney General's consumer protection division. State enforcement is in addition to your federal FDCPA rights and your right to sue under Nebraska Consumer Protection Act; Collection Agency Act.

Nebraska Consumer Protection Law

Nebraska Consumer Protection Act

In addition to the federal FDCPA, Nebraska 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 Nebraska Debt Lawsuit Typically Moves

  1. Service of process. A process server or sheriff hands you the summons and complaint. The 30-day clock starts from this date.
  2. File an Answer. Within 30 days, file a written Answer with the Nebraska 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, Nebraska 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 Nebraska.

FAQ: Debt Lawsuits in Nebraska

How long to respond in Nebraska?

30 days from service.

What is the SOL in Nebraska?

5 years for written contracts. 4 years for oral contracts.

Can wages be garnished?

Yes, but head of household may get 85% exemption.

Where are cases filed?

County court handles most consumer debt cases.

How long can a creditor sue me on a credit card or other debt in Nebraska?

Nebraska's statute of limitations is five years on written contracts (Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-205) and four years on oral contracts and accounts (§ 25-206). Most credit-card and store-card agreements are treated as written contracts, so the five-year period typically applies. The clock generally begins running from the date of last payment or the date of default, depending on the contract language. After the statute has run, the debt is time-barred and you have a complete defense to a lawsuit, but you must raise it as an affirmative defense in your answer to the complaint. A time-barred debt remains a debt the collector can ask you to pay voluntarily, but the collector cannot lawfully sue, threaten suit, or imply that suit is still available. Be careful about partial payments or written acknowledgment of an old debt; in some circumstances Nebraska law treats these as restarting the clock. If you are unsure of the date of last payment, request validation under the FDCPA and pull your credit reports for the original charge-off date.

If I am a head of household in Nebraska, how much can be garnished from my wages?

Nebraska law gives heads of household stronger wage-garnishment protection than the federal minimum. Under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1558, if you are the head of a family, the maximum garnishment is 15 percent of disposable earnings, meaning you keep 85 percent. For non-head-of-household earners, the limit follows the federal cap of 25 percent of disposable earnings or the amount above 30 times the federal minimum wage, whichever is less. Disposable earnings means earnings remaining after legally required deductions. To claim the head-of-household exemption you typically need to file an exemption claim with the court after garnishment is served and provide proof such as a tax return showing a dependent or other documentation that you provide more than half the support for someone in your household. Federal benefits including Social Security, SSI, VA, and most pensions are fully exempt from garnishment regardless of head-of-household status.

Is the collection agency suing me registered to operate in Nebraska?

Yes, third-party collection agencies and most debt buyers operating in Nebraska are required to register and post a bond under the Nebraska Collection Agency Act, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 45-601 et seq. Registration is administered through the Nebraska Secretary of State and the relevant licensing body. You can request verification or search the public registration list to confirm whether the entity suing you is currently registered. If the collector or debt buyer is not registered at the time it sent collection letters or filed suit, that is a strong defense and can also support a counterclaim under the Nebraska Consumer Protection Act. Even where a collector is registered, the bond requirement gives consumers a potential additional source of recovery if a judgment for damages is obtained. Always check registration first; it is one of the quickest ways to find leverage in a Nebraska collection case.

What does the Nebraska Consumer Protection Act add to my federal FDCPA rights?

The federal FDCPA, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1692-1692p, regulates third-party debt collectors and debt buyers but generally does not reach the original creditor. The Nebraska Consumer Protection Act and the Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 87-301 et seq. and § 59-1601 et seq., are broader and prohibit deceptive or unfair conduct by any business, including original creditors. Available remedies include actual damages, injunctive relief, attorney fees, and in some cases treble or enhanced damages. The Consumer Protection Division within the Nebraska Attorney General's office accepts written complaints and investigates patterns of abuse. In practice this means if a bank or hospital itself misrepresents the amount owed, threatens improper action, or fails to honor a written dispute, you may have a state-law claim even when the FDCPA does not directly apply. Combining state and federal claims can substantially improve settlement value.

What should I do if a Nebraska collector threatens to garnish my Social Security?

Social Security and most other federal benefits are protected from garnishment by private creditors under 42 U.S.C. § 407 and federal Treasury Rule 31 CFR Part 212. A collector who threatens to take your Social Security to pay a credit-card or medical debt is making a misleading statement and likely violating the FDCPA, 15 U.S.C. § 1692e. If those benefits are deposited into your bank account by direct deposit, banks are required to automatically protect up to two months of those benefits when a garnishment order is received. To preserve that protection, do not commingle Social Security with substantial amounts of other money in the same account, and keep records showing the direct-deposit source. If the bank freezes your account anyway, file an exemption claim with the court and notify the bank in writing. Document the collector's threats, save voicemails and letters, and consider filing a complaint with the Nebraska Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division and the CFPB.

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

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