Sued for Debt in North Dakota? Here's What to Do Next
A North Dakota debt-collection lawsuit gives you 21 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 North Dakota statutes and court rules.
Response Deadline: 21 Days
You have 21 days from the date you are served to file your Answer with the North Dakota court. Missing this deadline results in an automatic default judgment against you.
Debt Collection in North Dakota: Who Gets Complained About
In the last 24 months, 369 North Dakota residents filed CFPB complaints against the top debt collectors and credit card issuers tracked here. The most-complained-about in North Dakota:
- 1 LVNV Funding LLC — 96 North Dakota complaints
- 2 Capital One — 45 North Dakota complaints
- 3 Encore Capital Group — 42 North Dakota complaints
Source: CFPB Consumer Complaint Database , 24-month rolling window. If you were sued by one of these companies in North Dakota, read the linked page for state-specific defenses.
Statute of Limitations in North Dakota
| 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 North Dakota
Wage garnishment is allowed — up to 25% of disposable earnings
Greater of 75% of disposable earnings or 40x minimum wage exempt.
Court System in North Dakota
Small claims limit $15,000. District court handles larger civil cases.
Filing fees: $50-$200
Where the Case Can Be Filed
Federal FDCPA venue (15 U.S.C. § 1692i) requires a debt collector to sue in the judicial district where the consumer signed the contract or where the consumer currently resides. North Dakota district courts have unified civil jurisdiction; small claims court handles claims up to $15,000. Venue is generally proper in the county of the defendant's residence at the time of filing. Cass County (Fargo), Burleigh County (Bismarck), and Grand Forks County see the highest collection-suit volume.
North Dakota's Debt Collection Statute
ND UDAP; Collection Agency Act
NDCC Chapter 51-15 (Unlawful Sales or Advertising Practices); NDCC Chapter 13-05 (Collection Agencies)
North Dakota's UDAP statute, NDCC Chapter 51-15, prohibits unlawful, unfair, or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce, and reaches collection abuses by both third-party collectors and original creditors. The Collection Agency Act, NDCC Chapter 13-05, requires collection agencies and debt buyers to be licensed by the Department of Financial Institutions and to post a bond. Together with the federal FDCPA, these statutes form the core consumer protection in North Dakota collection cases. Civil penalties under NDCC 51-15-11 can reach $5,000 per violation.
North Dakota-Specific Protections Beyond the Federal FDCPA
ND requires every third-party collection agency and most debt buyers to be licensed under NDCC Chapter 13-05, with bonding requirements that give consumers an additional recovery source. The NDCC 51-15 UDAP statute allows recovery of actual damages, civil penalties up to $5,000 per violation, and attorney fees, and reaches both creditors and collectors. ND wage garnishment follows the federal CCPA cap of 25 percent of disposable earnings, with stronger exemptions for heads of household in some circumstances. ND homestead exemption protects $100,000 of equity in a primary residence (NDCC 47-18-01).
Common Debt-Collection Patterns in North Dakota
Credit-card debt-buyer cases dominate the North Dakota collection docket, concentrated in Cass, Burleigh, and Grand Forks counties. Medical debt from regional health systems including Sanford and Essentia is a major secondary category, with accounts often sold to specialty medical-debt buyers. Energy-sector boom-and-bust cycles in the Bakken region have produced waves of credit-card and high-cost loan defaults that surface in collection dockets across western counties. Auto-deficiency claims after repossession by subprime auto lenders are common.
File a Complaint with the North Dakota Attorney General
North Dakota Office of Attorney General
Consumer Protection Division
You can file complaints about debt collectors with the North Dakota Attorney General's consumer protection division. State enforcement is in addition to your federal FDCPA rights and your right to sue under ND UDAP; Collection Agency Act.
Collectors and Creditors Frequently Suing in North Dakota
These collection agencies and debt buyers regularly file consumer-debt lawsuits in North Dakota. Click through to see the specific guide for each, including documented FDCPA enforcement history.
Sued by Midland Credit Management in North Dakota?
Portfolio Recovery AssociatesSued by Portfolio Recovery Associates in North Dakota?
LVNV Funding LLCSued by LVNV Funding LLC in North Dakota?
Capital OneSued by Capital One in North Dakota?
Credit One BankSued by Credit One Bank in North Dakota?
Discover Financial ServicesSued by Discover Financial Services in North Dakota?
North Dakota Consumer Protection Law
North Dakota Consumer Fraud Act
In addition to the federal FDCPA, North Dakota 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 North Dakota Debt Lawsuit Typically Moves
- Service of process. A process server or sheriff hands you the summons and complaint. The 21-day clock starts from this date.
- File an Answer. Within 21 days, file a written Answer with the North Dakota 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.
- 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.
- Settlement or trial. Most cases settle. If yours doesn't, North Dakota courts decide on the documents and live testimony.
- If a judgment is entered. See the wage-garnishment and exemption sections above for what a collector can and cannot do in North Dakota.
FAQ: Debt Lawsuits in North Dakota
How long to respond in North Dakota?
21 days from service.
What is the SOL?
6 years for all contract types.
Can wages be garnished?
Yes. Greater of 75% of disposable earnings or 40x minimum wage is exempt.
Where are cases filed?
Small claims up to $15,000. District court for larger amounts.
Is the collection agency suing me licensed under NDCC Chapter 13-05?
Yes, third-party collection agencies and most debt buyers operating in North Dakota are required to be licensed under NDCC Chapter 13-05 by the North Dakota Department of Financial Institutions. Licensees must post a bond, which provides a potential additional source of recovery for consumers who obtain a judgment against the collector. You can verify a license by searching the DFI's online licensee lookup or by contacting the department directly. If the entity that sent you collection letters or filed suit was not licensed at the relevant time, that is a defense to the action and may support a counterclaim under NDCC 51-15. Even where a collector is currently licensed, look at the entire chain of title in a debt-buyer case: the original creditor's assignee, intermediate debt buyers, and the current plaintiff must all comply with licensing requirements when applicable. Always check licensure first; it is one of the fastest ways to find leverage in a North Dakota collection case.
How long does a creditor have to sue me on a debt in North Dakota?
North Dakota's statute of limitations is six years on most written contracts and open accounts under NDCC 28-01-16, which includes most credit-card and consumer-debt claims. Some specific causes of action have different limitation periods. The clock generally begins running from the date of last payment or default. Once the six-year period has expired, the debt is time-barred and you have a complete defense to a lawsuit, but you must affirmatively raise the defense in your answer. A time-barred debt remains payable voluntarily, but suing or threatening suit on a time-barred debt violates the FDCPA, 15 U.S.C. § 1692e, and may also violate NDCC 51-15. Partial payments and written acknowledgments can restart the clock under certain circumstances, so be careful with old debts. If unsure of the date of last payment, send a written validation request under FDCPA 15 U.S.C. § 1692g and pull your credit reports to find the original charge-off date as a reference point.
What does NDCC Chapter 51-15 add to my federal FDCPA rights?
The federal FDCPA applies only to third-party collectors and debt buyers, but North Dakota's UDAP statute, NDCC Chapter 51-15, reaches a broader range of conduct by any business engaged in trade or commerce, including original creditors. It prohibits any unfair, deceptive, fraudulent, or unconscionable practice and provides for actual damages, attorney fees, costs, and civil penalties up to $5,000 per violation. The Consumer Protection Division of the North Dakota Office of Attorney General enforces NDCC 51-15 and accepts complaints. In practice, this means if a national bank, a hospital billing department, or another original creditor engages in misleading collection conduct that falls outside the FDCPA, you may still have a strong state-law claim. Combining FDCPA against the third-party collector with NDCC 51-15 against the original creditor or debt buyer can substantially increase the settlement value of a North Dakota collection case.
Can a North Dakota collector garnish my Social Security or other federal benefits?
No. Social Security, SSI, VA benefits, federal pensions, and most other federal benefits are exempt from garnishment by private creditors under 42 U.S.C. § 407 and 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 that violates the FDCPA, 15 U.S.C. § 1692e. When federal benefits are deposited into your bank account by direct deposit, the bank is required to automatically protect up to two months of those deposits when a garnishment order is received, without you having to file anything. To preserve that automatic protection, avoid commingling federal benefits with significant amounts of other money in the same account. If your bank account is frozen, file an exemption claim with the court promptly and provide proof of the benefit source. Document any threats to take exempt funds; that conduct typically supports an FDCPA counterclaim with statutory damages up to $1,000 plus attorney fees, and may also support an NDCC 51-15 claim.
I was sued in North Dakota. What is the deadline to respond and what should I do?
If you have been served with a summons and complaint in a North Dakota collection case, you generally have 21 days to file a written answer (Rule 12, North Dakota Rules of Civil Procedure). If you do not respond, the plaintiff can move for default and the court can enter a default judgment for the full amount claimed plus interest and costs. Once a judgment is entered, the collector can pursue wage garnishment up to the federal cap, bank levy, and property liens. First, verify proper service. Second, check the date of default against the six-year statute of limitations under NDCC 28-01-16. Third, demand the original signed agreement, the full chain of assignments if a debt buyer is suing, and itemized statements showing how the balance was calculated. Fourth, raise FDCPA and NDCC 51-15 counterclaims if the collector engaged in misleading conduct. Fifth, check licensure under NDCC 13-05. Always file your answer on time; default judgments can be vacated under Rule 60 but it is harder than defending on the merits.
This page summarizes public information from the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database, the FDCPA, and North Dakota state law (statutes, civil procedure rules, and court structure). It is not legal advice. Statutes and court rules change — consult a licensed attorney in North Dakota for guidance on your specific case.
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