Practice area
Consumer Debt Defense
Representation in Florida creditor lawsuits, with written responses filed inside the 20-day window, settlement negotiation, and defense against wage garnishment and FDCPA harassment.
Consumer debt defense is about getting control back. A creditor lawsuit, a wage garnishment, or a relentless debt collector can take over a family’s life in a way that is hard to describe to anyone who has not been there. Our job is to stop the bleeding, review what you actually owe, and build the cleanest path out.
When a creditor sues you
Getting served with a collection lawsuit is not the end. Many creditor cases have real defenses. Standing problems (has the debt actually been assigned to the party suing you?), statute of limitations issues, accounting errors, or improper service can all change the outcome. You typically have 20 days to file an answer once served with a Florida complaint. Miss that window and you may face a default judgment, followed by wage garnishment or bank levies. The fix for a default is much harder than the fix for a pending case.
Call us the same day you are served.
Negotiating with creditors
A court-filed settlement is rarely the only path. Many creditors will settle for a meaningful percentage of the balance, particularly when the defenses to the claim are strong and the alternative is drawn-out litigation. We negotiate lump-sum settlements, structured payment plans, and creditor workout agreements, always with written documentation and clear terms.
Defending against garnishment and levies
When a creditor already holds a judgment, the next tools are wage garnishment and bank account levies. Florida law includes real protections for wage earners and for funds that originated from exempt sources such as Social Security, but the protections only work if you assert them in time. We review active judgments, file claims of exemption where the law supports them, and seek to vacate judgments entered by default where the grounds exist.
Stopping collector harassment
Abusive calls, letters, and pressure tactics from third-party debt collectors are regulated by the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. When collectors cross the line, the FDCPA provides real remedies, including actual damages, statutory damages, and attorney fees. We document the conduct, send the demands that the statute requires, and pursue relief when the facts support it.
What we handle
Services in this practice area
- Creditor lawsuit defense
- Debt negotiation & settlement
- Wage garnishment defense
- Debt collection harassment (FDCPA)
- Credit report disputes
- Statute of limitations defenses
- Challenges to debt buyer standing
How it works
The process, step by step
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Financial intake
We review your debts, income, assets, and any legal actions already underway. That picture drives every recommendation.
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Option review
We walk through every realistic path, including negotiated settlement, lawsuit defense, and structured repayment, and explain the trade-offs plainly.
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Execution
We handle the paperwork, negotiations, and court appearances on your behalf so you are not facing creditor counsel alone.
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Follow-through
Harassment from debt collectors is a violation of federal law. We pursue FDCPA remedies when collectors cross the line and stay available as your situation evolves.
Common questions
What clients ask us first
A creditor sued me. What do I do?
Do not ignore the lawsuit. You typically have 20 days to file an answer in Florida, and missing that deadline results in a default judgment. Call us the same day you are served. Many creditor cases have valid defenses, including standing, statute of limitations, improper assignment, or accounting errors.
Can you stop a wage garnishment that's already in place?
Sometimes. Florida exempts the wages of the head of a family who earns less than $750 per week, and other exemptions may apply. If a garnishment is active, we review the underlying judgment, the writ, and your claim of exemption rights. Acting quickly is important because each pay period continues the withholding.
What is an FDCPA violation and what can I recover?
The federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act prohibits abusive, deceptive, and unfair collection practices by third-party debt collectors. Violations include calling at prohibited hours, contacting you after you have demanded they stop in writing, misrepresenting the amount owed, and threatening action they cannot take. Consumers can recover actual damages, statutory damages up to $1,000, and attorney fees.
How do I know if a debt buyer has the right to sue me?
Many collection suits are filed by debt buyers who purchased the account years after the original creditor wrote it off. Florida requires the plaintiff to prove standing, which typically means producing the chain of assignment from the original creditor to the current owner. A broken chain is often dispositive, and the procedural defects are not always obvious until the documents are reviewed carefully.
Related practice areas
Work we often handle together
Let's talk.
Schedule a consultation by phone, video, or in person, or call the office directly.