Sued by Portfolio Recovery Associates in Louisiana? Here's What to Do Next
Louisiana RESPONSE DEADLINE
15 Days
from the date you were served
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
3 Years
for typical Portfolio Recovery Associates debts in LA
WAGE GARNISHMENT
Allowed — up to 25%
What Louisiana consumers say about Portfolio Recovery Associates
In the last 24 months, 735 Louisiana residents filed CFPB complaints naming Portfolio Recovery Associates . 81% of these complaints involve debt collection; 18% involve credit reporting or other personal consumer reports.
Most common complaint categories:
- 265 Attempts to collect debt not owed
- 114 Written notification about debt
- 100 Took or threatened to take negative or legal action
Source: CFPB Consumer Complaint Database , 24-month rolling window through May 2026.
About Portfolio Recovery Associates
Portfolio Recovery Associates (PRA) is one of the largest debt buyers in the United States, operating as a subsidiary of PRA Group, Inc. PRA purchases portfolios of defaulted consumer receivables — primarily credit card debt — and collects through direct contact and litigation. PRA files tens of thousands of lawsuits each year and has faced significant regulatory action, including a $108 million settlement with the CFPB in 2015 for practices including suing consumers with insufficient documentation.
Type: Debt Buyer. Parent company: PRA Group, Inc.. Common debt types: credit card, personal loan, auto deficiency, retail credit.
CFPB Enforcement History
Portfolio Recovery Associates has been the subject of two separate major CFPB enforcement actions. The CFPB has formally labeled PRA a "repeat offender" — the 2023 action specifically found that PRA continued the same violations that the 2015 consent order was meant to stop.
2015 · consent order
$27M total ($19M consumer refunds + $8M civil penalty)
CFPB found that PRA collected on unsubstantiated debt, filed misleading affidavits in debt-collection lawsuits, misrepresented its intent to prove debts if contested, and sued consumers on time-barred debts.
2023 · consent order
$24M+ total ($12.18M consumer redress + $12M civil penalty)
CFPB found that PRA violated the 2015 order by continuing to collect on unsubstantiated debt, suing without required documentation, suing on time-barred debt, and failing to investigate consumer disputes in its credit reporting.
Louisiana-Specific Defenses Against Portfolio Recovery Associates
Statute of Limitations Defense
In Louisiana, 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. Portfolio Recovery Associates has been the subject of CFPB findings related to suing on time-barred debts — check your dates carefully and raise the SOL defense in your Answer.
Lack of Standing / Chain of Title
As a debt buyer, Portfolio Recovery Associates must prove they actually purchased your specific account. Demand the complete chain of title — the purchase agreement, bill of sale, and assignment documents. In Louisiana courts, failing to produce this documentation can result in dismissal.
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.
Louisiana Wage Garnishment Exemptions
Federal limits apply. Head of household claiming dependents may get additional exemptions.
Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law
In addition to the federal FDCPA, Louisiana's Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law may provide additional protections and remedies against Portfolio Recovery Associates's collection practices.
Louisiana Court System
Small claims limit varies by parish. City and district courts handle civil cases. Filing fees in Louisiana typically range $50-$250.
Common FDCPA Violations by Portfolio Recovery Associates
- Filing lawsuits based on insufficient or fabricated documentation
- Suing consumers after the statute of limitations has expired on the debt
- Attempting to collect debts that were already paid or settled with the original creditor
- Failing to properly verify debts after receiving written dispute from consumer
- Adding unauthorized interest, fees, or collection costs to the original debt balance
Statute of Limitations in Louisiana
| Debt Type | SOL (Years) |
|---|---|
| Credit Card | 3 |
| Medical | 3 |
| Auto | 3 |
| Personal Loan | 3 |
| Written Contract | 10 |
| Oral Contract | 3 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is Portfolio Recovery Associates?
Portfolio Recovery Associates (PRA) is a major debt buyer owned by PRA Group, Inc. They purchase defaulted consumer debts from banks and credit card companies and pursue collection through calls, letters, credit reporting, and lawsuits.
Has PRA been in trouble with regulators?
Yes. In 2015, the CFPB ordered PRA Group to pay $108 million for using litigation tactics that violated the law, including suing consumers without verifying debts and collecting debts that were not owed.
Can I beat a PRA lawsuit?
Yes. Many PRA lawsuits can be successfully defended by challenging their standing to sue, demanding proof of the chain of title, raising statute of limitations defenses, and challenging the accuracy of the amount claimed.
What should I do if PRA contacts me?
Request debt validation in writing within 30 days of their first contact. Do not acknowledge the debt or make any payments, as this could restart the statute of limitations in some states. Consider consulting with a consumer rights attorney.
Can PRA garnish my bank account?
Only after obtaining a court judgment. If PRA sues you and you do not respond, they will get a default judgment that allows wage garnishment and bank levies in most states. Filing your Answer is the critical first step to prevent this.
How long to respond in Louisiana?
Only 15 days. This is one of the shortest deadlines — act immediately.
What is the SOL in Louisiana?
3 years for open accounts and credit cards. 10 years for written contracts (promissory notes).
Can they garnish wages?
Yes. Federal limits apply.
What is unique about Louisiana law?
Louisiana is based on civil law (not common law like other states). Some legal procedures differ from other states.
What is the statute of limitations on credit-card debt in Louisiana?
Most credit-card and open-account debt in Louisiana is governed by a 3-year liberative prescription under La. Civ. Code art. 3494. That clock generally runs from the date of last activity or last payment on the account. Debt based on a signed written contract (some installment loans, promissory notes) can be subject to a 10-year prescription under art. 3499, but routine revolving credit-card accounts fall under the 3-year rule. Once prescription runs, the debt is unenforceable in court if you raise the defense. Prescription is not automatic, though - you have to plead it as an affirmative defense in your answer or it can be waived. Making a partial payment, signing a written acknowledgment, or agreeing to a new payment plan can interrupt or restart prescription, so do not promise to pay or send money on an old debt without first confirming the dates. If a collector sues on a debt that is past its prescription period, that suit itself may violate the FDCPA.
Can a debt collector garnish my wages in Louisiana?
Yes, but only after suing you, winning a judgment, and obtaining a garnishment order from the court. Louisiana has one of the more protective wage-garnishment statutes in the country. Under La. R.S. 13:3881, a collector can take only 25% of your disposable earnings, meaning 75% of your wages after taxes and required withholdings are exempt. Federal law (15 U.S.C. § 1673) sets the same 25% cap, so Louisiana lines up with the federal floor. Certain income is fully protected: Social Security, SSI, VA benefits, unemployment, and most public assistance cannot be garnished for ordinary consumer debt. If a creditor freezes your bank account, you can claim those exemptions, but you typically have to act fast - file a claim of exemption with the court that issued the garnishment, usually within a short window after service. Talk to a Louisiana consumer attorney before any wages are taken if you can.
Does Louisiana have a state little-FDCPA?
Not in the comprehensive way states like Maryland, Massachusetts, or California do. Louisiana has not enacted a standalone state Fair Debt Collection Practices Act covering collectors the way the federal FDCPA does. Instead, abusive collection conduct is generally pursued under the Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law (LUTPA), La. R.S. 51:1401 et seq., which prohibits "unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce." Louisiana courts have applied LUTPA to debt-collection misconduct in some cases. The practical effect is that most state-court actions against abusive collectors in Louisiana are still filed under the federal FDCPA, sometimes layered with LUTPA claims for added remedies. The federal FDCPA carries statutory damages up to $1,000 per case plus actual damages and attorney's fees under 15 U.S.C. § 1692k, which is usually the workhorse claim.
What does it cost to defend a debt collection lawsuit in Louisiana?
Many Louisiana consumer attorneys handle FDCPA defense on a contingency-style or fee-shifting basis, because the federal FDCPA (15 U.S.C. § 1692k) and LUTPA both allow a prevailing consumer to recover attorney's fees from the collector. If you have valid defenses or counterclaims - prescription, lack of standing by a debt buyer, validation failures, abusive conduct - an attorney may take your case without charging you out of pocket, intending to collect fees from the collector if you win. For simpler defenses, you may be able to file your own answer pleading prescription and lack of standing without a lawyer, especially in city or parish courts. Many parishes also have self-help resources through clerk's offices. Avoid ignoring the suit at all costs: a default judgment in Louisiana can lead to garnishment, bank seizure, and seizure of non-exempt property, and judgments in Louisiana are good for 10 years under La. R.S. 13:3068, renewable.
Can a Louisiana debt collector contact me at work?
Federal FDCPA § 1692c(a)(3) prohibits a collector from calling you at work if the collector knows or has reason to know your employer prohibits such calls. You do not need to put it in writing initially - a clear oral statement is enough to trigger the rule once the collector has been told. To create a paper trail, send the collector a short written notice by mail or email saying your employer does not allow personal calls and instructing them to stop contacting you at work. Keep a copy. After they receive that notice, any further work calls are a violation worth up to $1,000 in statutory damages plus actual damages and attorney's fees under § 1692k. You can also use FDCPA § 1692c(c) to demand the collector cease all communication with you, though that does not stop them from suing - it only stops phone calls and letters. Louisiana's LUTPA may layer additional remedies on top.
Sued by Portfolio Recovery Associates in Another State?
Portfolio Recovery Associates files cases nationwide. Select your state for the response deadline, statute of limitations, and state-specific defenses.
Sued by a Different Collector in Louisiana?
The 15-day Louisiana response deadline applies no matter who sued you. Pick the creditor on your summons for creditor-specific defenses.
This page summarizes public information from the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database, CFPB enforcement records, and Louisiana state law. It is not legal advice. Statutes and court rules change — consult a licensed attorney in Louisiana for guidance on your specific case.
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