The National Collection Agency, Inc.
1620 School St Ste 105
Moraga, CA 94556-1147
The National Collection Agency, Inc.
The National Collection Agency, Inc. is an California collection agency. California collection agencies can help businesses, medical practices and facilities that are creditors to collect their accounts receivable. Debt collection help might include; collection demand letters, debt collector phone calls, credit reporting to credit bureaus and legal proceedings including lawsuits.
As with any business, if you are considering hiring The National Collection Agency, Inc. to collect your debts, you should contact their local Better Business Bureau and check their references.
You should be certain that The National Collection Agency, Inc. is abiding by the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), the main law that regulates collection agencies. You don’t want to damage your reputation or create a liability for you business by using a disreputable debt collector.
You might also want to find out if the California Attorney General has taken any action against them for privacy violations or not abiding by collection agency regulations. You should also know that they are in compliance with all California collections laws including (but not limited to):
- California Collection Agency Bond & Licensing Rules
- California Statute Of Limitations
- California Interest Rates (to avoid usury)
- California Wage Garnishment Exemptions
- California Bad Check Laws (NSF)
The National Collection Agency, Inc.
arwick betsle says
National Debt Collections is a real collection agency, and debt collectors can contact you by phone, email in person or by letter.
Collectors must be certain that e-mail notices of debts are not intercepted by others (such as your spouse or anyone with whom you share e-mail accounts). Prior consent of the consumer is needed before electronic debt collection communications can be sent.
A debt collector is required by law to send written notice of the debt within 5 days of first contact. Open the PDF after scanning for virus's to see what it says, no harm as long as you do not click any links or give them your personal information.
If you do not get written notice and fail to open the file, you might just pull your credit history in the future to find the collection account listed on it.