The website points out that even a minor debt less than $10 can harm a persons credit rating. Things like unpaid library fines, unpaid for video rentals, and other debts and turn into something worse in the long-term.
“If the collection agency reports the collection to the credit bureaus, the answer is, yes, it will most likely have a significant impact and hurt your credit score,” it says. “When it comes to collection accounts, the amount of the collection has no direct impact on your credit score.”
It also says that when a collection letter comes in the mail, it’s best to address it right away and one only has 30 days to dispute the claim.
And earlier this year, Bloomberg News reported that debt collectors have been posing as Facebook friends after phone calls were made.
“It’s not like they needed to go on Facebook to find me,” Kathryn Haralson, 47, told the news agency in February. “I was in contact with them all the time. That crossed the line.”
Richard Cordray, the head of the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, said that “nearly one out of every 10 Americans” have debts totaling more than $1,500 in damage, forcing the agency to provide more oversight regarding collection agencies.
“We will be using both our supervision authority and our enforcement authority to oversee the market and go after bad actors who flout the law,” Cordray said.