Skip to main content

Sued by National Credit Systems in Maryland? Here's What to Do Next

Maryland RESPONSE DEADLINE

30 Days

from the date you were served

STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS

3 Years

for typical National Credit Systems debts in MD

WAGE GARNISHMENT

Allowed — up to 25%

What Maryland consumers say about National Credit Systems

In the last 24 months, 268 Maryland residents filed CFPB complaints naming National Credit Systems . 76% of these complaints involve debt collection; 23% involve credit reporting or other personal consumer reports.

Most common complaint categories:

  • 76 Attempts to collect debt not owed
  • 67 False statements or representation
  • 36 Incorrect information on your report

Source: CFPB Consumer Complaint Database , 24-month rolling window through May 2026.

About National Credit Systems

National Credit Systems (NCS) is a collection agency that specializes in collecting apartment and rental debts, including unpaid rent, lease break fees, and property damage claims. NCS is frequently reported to the CFPB for inaccurate debt amounts and failure to validate debts. They work primarily with property management companies and landlords to collect after tenants have moved out.

Type: Collection Agency. Common debt types: rent, lease break, property damage, utility.

CFPB Enforcement History

National Credit Systems, Inc. is an Atlanta-based debt collector specializing in apartment, rental, and multi-family housing debt. In February 2023, the CFPB filed a petition in the Northern District of Georgia to enforce a Civil Investigative Demand against National Credit Systems, after the company refused to respond pending the Supreme Court's CFPB funding ruling. The CFPB's investigation is examining whether NCS made false or misleading representations to consumers, collected unlawful amounts in violation of the FDCPA and CFPA, and furnished inaccurate information to credit reporting agencies. As of this writing the investigation is ongoing and no consent order has been entered.

Maryland-Specific Defenses Against National Credit Systems

Statute of Limitations Defense

In Maryland, the statute of limitations for credit card debt is 3 years. If your last payment was more than 3 years ago, the debt is time-barred. Verify when your last payment or account activity occurred and raise the SOL defense in your Answer if applicable.

Challenge the Amount

Demand a complete accounting from the original creditor's last statement through the current claimed balance. Any unauthorized fees, post-charge-off interest, or collection costs not in the original agreement should be disputed line by line.

Maryland Wage Garnishment Exemptions

Greater of 75% of disposable wages or 30x federal minimum wage exempt. Caroline, Kent, Queen Anne's, and Worcester counties: $145/week minimum exempt.

Maryland Consumer Debt Collection Act / Maryland Consumer Protection Act

In addition to the federal FDCPA, Maryland's Maryland Consumer Debt Collection Act / Maryland Consumer Protection Act may provide additional protections and remedies against National Credit Systems's collection practices.

Maryland Court System

District court handles cases up to $30,000. Circuit court for larger amounts. Filing fees in Maryland typically range $35-$300.

Common FDCPA Violations by National Credit Systems

  • Collecting inflated amounts that include improper charges not in the original lease
  • Failing to account for security deposit credits owed to the tenant
  • Reporting debts to credit bureaus without proper validation
  • Collecting on lease-break fees that violate state landlord-tenant law
  • Failing to provide itemized accounting when requested

Statute of Limitations in Maryland

Debt Type SOL (Years)
Credit Card 3
Medical 3
Auto 3
Personal Loan 3
Written Contract 3
Oral Contract 3

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is National Credit Systems?

NCS is a collection agency that primarily collects debts for apartment complexes and property management companies, including unpaid rent, lease break fees, and damage claims.

Can they collect for lease break fees?

It depends on your lease and state law. Many states require landlords to mitigate damages by finding a new tenant. If they did not try, the lease break fee may be unenforceable.

What about my security deposit?

If your landlord did not return your security deposit or provide a proper itemization, this reduces or eliminates what you owe. Many NCS debts do not account for security deposit credits.

How do I dispute an NCS debt?

Send a written validation request within 30 days of their first contact. Demand an itemized accounting of all charges and credits. Compare it to your lease agreement and move-out records.

How long to respond in Maryland?

30 days from service.

What is the SOL in Maryland?

3 years for all contract types. This is one of the shortest in the country.

Does Maryland have its own collection law?

Yes. The Maryland Consumer Debt Collection Act provides additional protections beyond the federal FDCPA.

Can wages be garnished?

Yes. 25% of disposable earnings, with minimum weekly exemptions varying by county.

Was the collector suing me licensed in Maryland?

This is the first question to ask in any Maryland debt-buyer suit. Under the Maryland Collection Agency Licensing Act (Md. Bus. Reg. § 7-101 et seq.), any collection agency or debt buyer collecting Maryland consumer debt must be licensed by the State Collection Agency Licensing Board. The Maryland Court of Appeals held in Finch v. LVNV Funding (2016) that judgments obtained by unlicensed debt buyers are void and unenforceable. After Finch, thousands of LVNV judgments were vacated. You can check whether a collector is licensed by searching the Department of Labor's licensing database at the Maryland State Collection Agency Licensing Board page. If the collector who sued you was unlicensed at the time, you may be able to vacate any judgment, get any garnished wages back, and pursue MCDCA claims for actual damages, attorney's fees, and punitive damages. Maryland consumer attorneys routinely litigate licensing-based defenses, and the fee-shifting in the MCDCA means representation often costs nothing out of pocket.

What is the statute of limitations on credit-card debt in Maryland?

Maryland has a 3-year statute of limitations on most contract and credit-card debt under Md. Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-101. That is shorter than many states. The clock runs from the date of breach - typically the date of last payment or charge-off. Maryland is a strict state on this: the SOL is a complete defense if pleaded properly, and Maryland Rule 3-308 makes it an affirmative defense that must be raised in your answer. Maryland law (Md. Comm. Law § 14-202(11)) also explicitly prohibits collectors from filing suit on time-barred debt, threatening to file, or attempting to collect through the courts after the SOL has run. That makes Maryland one of the few states where suing on a time-barred debt is itself a per-se statutory violation by the collector. If a collector sues you after the 3-year clock has expired, you may have both a defense to the suit and a counterclaim worth statutory damages and attorney's fees. Do not pay or even acknowledge old Maryland debt without first checking the SOL.

Can a collector garnish my wages in Maryland?

Yes, but only after suing you and obtaining a judgment, and then only up to limits set by Md. Comm. Law § 15-601.1. Maryland caps wage garnishment at the lesser of (a) 25% of your disposable income or (b) the amount your disposable income exceeds 30 times the federal minimum wage, with somewhat stronger protections in certain counties. Maryland also protects more income types than federal law: Social Security, SSI, VA benefits, unemployment, workers' comp, child support received, and most public assistance cannot be garnished for ordinary consumer debt. To stop or reduce an active wage garnishment, you can file a motion in the court that issued the order claiming exemption, asserting hardship, or contesting the underlying judgment - particularly if the original debt buyer was unlicensed (see Finch v. LVNV). Maryland Legal Aid and many consumer attorneys take these cases on a fee-shifting basis, so representation may cost nothing if you have a viable defense.

What protections does the MCDCA add beyond federal FDCPA?

The Maryland Consumer Debt Collection Act is broader than the federal FDCPA in several important ways. First, it applies to both third-party collectors and original creditors, whereas federal FDCPA mostly exempts original creditors. Second, it specifically prohibits collectors from claiming a right to enforce a debt with knowledge they have no such right - which is the basis for many Finch-style licensing claims. Third, it explicitly prohibits collectors from suing or threatening to sue on time-barred debt. Fourth, MCDCA violations can support claims under the Maryland Consumer Protection Act (Md. Comm. Law § 13-101), which authorizes treble damages and attorney's fees. Combined federal-FDCPA and MCDCA claims often produce larger recoveries than federal law alone. Maryland courts have also been generally receptive to consumer claims. Common MCDCA violations include collecting without a license, suing on time-barred debt, misrepresenting amounts owed, harassing communication, and contacting consumers after a cease-and-desist letter.

How do I respond to a Maryland District Court collection lawsuit?

You generally have 30 days from service to file a written Notice of Intention to Defend with the District Court. Never ignore the summons - that leads to a default judgment, which becomes the basis for wage garnishment and bank seizures. In your answer, raise every available affirmative defense: statute of limitations (3 years for most contract debt), lack of standing (the debt buyer must prove a complete chain of title from original creditor to itself), unlicensed collection activity under the Collection Agency Licensing Act, failure to validate under FDCPA § 1692g, and any improper service or venue. Maryland courts require debt buyers to produce actual proof of assignment, not just a generic affidavit - missing or incomplete documentation is a common reason for dismissal. Maryland Legal Aid (1-866-MD-LAW-HELP) provides free or low-cost help for income-eligible consumers, and many private consumer attorneys take these cases on contingency or with fee-shifting. Counter-suing under MCDCA and FDCPA can transform the case from "how do I avoid paying" into "the collector pays me."

Sued by National Credit Systems in Another State?

National Credit Systems files cases nationwide. Select your state for the response deadline, statute of limitations, and state-specific defenses.

National Credit Systems in Alabama National Credit Systems in Alaska National Credit Systems in Arizona National Credit Systems in Arkansas National Credit Systems in California National Credit Systems in Colorado National Credit Systems in Connecticut National Credit Systems in Delaware National Credit Systems in Florida National Credit Systems in Georgia National Credit Systems in Hawaii National Credit Systems in Idaho National Credit Systems in Illinois National Credit Systems in Indiana National Credit Systems in Iowa National Credit Systems in Kansas National Credit Systems in Kentucky National Credit Systems in Louisiana National Credit Systems in Maine National Credit Systems in Massachusetts National Credit Systems in Michigan National Credit Systems in Minnesota National Credit Systems in Mississippi National Credit Systems in Missouri National Credit Systems in Montana National Credit Systems in Nebraska National Credit Systems in Nevada National Credit Systems in New Hampshire National Credit Systems in New Jersey National Credit Systems in New Mexico National Credit Systems in New York National Credit Systems in North Carolina National Credit Systems in North Dakota National Credit Systems in Ohio National Credit Systems in Oklahoma National Credit Systems in Oregon National Credit Systems in Pennsylvania National Credit Systems in Rhode Island National Credit Systems in South Carolina National Credit Systems in South Dakota National Credit Systems in Tennessee National Credit Systems in Texas National Credit Systems in Utah National Credit Systems in Vermont National Credit Systems in Virginia National Credit Systems in Washington National Credit Systems in West Virginia National Credit Systems in Wisconsin National Credit Systems in Wyoming National Credit Systems in District of Columbia

This page summarizes public information from the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database, CFPB enforcement records, and Maryland state law. It is not legal advice. Statutes and court rules change — consult a licensed attorney in Maryland for guidance on your specific case.

Get Your Free National Credit Systems Case Review in Maryland

Our attorney will review your National Credit Systems lawsuit and explain your options in Maryland. Free consultation.

Attorney-negotiated settlements available now. Act fast - creditors are calling.

Respond to Your Lawsuit Call Now