Debt Buyers in Nevada
Nevada requires debt buyers to hold a collection-agency license and follow state collection statutes. Unlicensed operators and those with broken chains of title can be defeated using FDCPA and state UDAP claims.
A "debt buyer" (also called a junk debt buyer, JDB, or debt purchaser) is a company that buys charged-off consumer debt from original creditors for pennies on the dollar -- typically 3-5 cents per dollar face value -- and attempts to collect the full balance. Common Nevada debt buyers include Midland Funding, LVNV Funding, Portfolio Recovery Associates, Cavalry SPV, and Jefferson Capital Systems.
Nevada Licensing Regime
Licensing: Collection agency license (NRS Chapter 649).
Chain-of-title standard: Evidence rules control.
Applicable consumer statute: Nevada Deceptive Trade Practices Act (NRS 598.0903).
Unlicensed collection activity in Nevada is itself an actionable violation in most cases -- both as an independent state claim and as an FDCPA violation (because federal law prohibits collecting "by any means" that is illegal under state law).
FDCPA and Chain-of-Title Proof
Federal FDCPA (15 U.S.C. Section 1692g) and state law in Nevada generally require a debt buyer to produce:
- The original cardholder agreement - proving the account existed and terms were agreed to.
- Billing statements showing activity, charges, and last payment date.
- Charge-off statement - the balance at the moment the original creditor wrote off the debt.
- Assignment documentation - each transfer from original creditor through any intermediaries to the current plaintiff.
- Bill of sale and purchase agreement showing the specific account is included in the sold portfolio.
- Affidavits from each transferring entity's records custodian.
In contested Nevada cases, one or more of these links is frequently missing. Missing links = no enforceable debt. See proof-of-debt checklist.
Nevada Defenses to Junk Debt Suits
If a debt buyer has filed suit against you in Nevada, available defenses include:
- Failure to state a claim. Complaint lacks specific allegations about the original creditor, assignment chain, or account details.
- Standing. JDB cannot prove it owns your specific account; only owns a portfolio generally.
- Statute of limitations. If the last legitimate activity was more than the state SOL years ago, the debt is time-barred. See Nevada credit card SOL.
- Account stated rejection. Challenge whether the final balance was ever agreed to.
- Usury/unlawful fees. Fees added post-charge-off may be challengeable.
- Unlicensed collection. If the JDB lacks required Nevada licensing, collection itself may be void.
- FDCPA counterclaim. Filing a time-barred suit or misrepresenting the debt can trigger $1,000 statutory damages plus attorney fees.
See SOL defense mechanics and when to fight.
Nevada Debt Buyer Settlement Economics
Nevada debt buyers paid 3-5 cents per dollar for your account. A settlement at 20-40% of face value is therefore extremely profitable for them -- and still provides real relief to you:
- Opening offer: JDBs typically accept 20-40% of claimed balance.
- Pre-suit: Settlement range 30-50%; avoid the suit entirely.
- Post-suit, pre-judgment: 40-60%; courthouse settlement common.
- Post-judgment: 50-70%; execution risk drives urgency.
Always insist on: (1) written settlement agreement identifying the specific debt, (2) dismissal with prejudice if suit was filed, (3) confirmation the account will be reported as "Paid for Less than Full Balance" or "Paid/Settled" (not "Paid in Full" unless you negotiated that), and (4) no 1099-C unless the forgiveness exceeds $600 and you accept the tax hit.
Nevada Federal Bankruptcy Data
When defending a debt buyer is not enough -- because multiple JDB suits are pending, or the original creditor assignments are stronger than expected -- bankruptcy extinguishes the underlying debt. These FJC numbers show how Nevada debtors actually resolve junk debt.
Numbers below come from the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database covering 242 consumer bankruptcy cases from Nevada's federal bankruptcy courts.
| Chapter | Cases Filed | Discharge Rate | Dismissal Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chapter 7 | 164 | 93.4% | 5.9% |
| Chapter 13 | 78 | 37.2% | 62.8% |
Rates computed on resolved cases only. Source: FJC Integrated Database.
When Bankruptcy Defeats Nevada Debt Buyers
Bankruptcy has several advantages over defending each JDB suit individually:
- Automatic stay. All JDB lawsuits freeze instantly on filing under 11 U.S.C. Section 362.
- Discharge. Most JDB-held consumer debt is unsecured and fully discharged under Section 727 (Ch 7) or 1328 (Ch 13).
- Schedule F reaches all creditors. You do not need to track each JDB suit separately.
- Proof of claim reversal. In bankruptcy, the JDB must produce the same chain-of-title documentation or the claim can be disallowed under 11 U.S.C. Section 502. You can object and win even without full litigation.
- No post-discharge contact. Discharged debt cannot be collected; JDBs attempting to collect violate 11 U.S.C. Section 524 and face contempt sanctions.
See proof of debt in bankruptcy and Nevada credit card bankruptcy.
Shell Companies and Affiliate Networks
Many JDB operations use layered corporate structures: LVNV Funding operates with Resurgent Capital; Midland Funding operates with Midland Credit Management; Portfolio Recovery uses multiple affiliates. This layering can complicate chain-of-title proofs and creates enforcement targets under Nevada consumer statutes.
When responding to a Nevada JDB suit, research the plaintiff's corporate parent and related entities. Inconsistent naming between the complaint, underlying agreement, and affidavit is grounds for dismissal in many Nevada courts. See shell company deep-dive.