Debt Collector Harassment — Your Rights in South Africa
Debt collectors cannot threaten you, call you at unreasonable hours, or lie about legal action. The Debt Collectors Act and NCA protect you. Here is how to stop harassment today.
FreeSouth African Law
Debt collector threats are often unlawful.
Debt collectors cannot arrest you, have you jailed, or seize your property without a court order. Do not make payments under threat — get legal advice first.
Direct Answer
Debt collectors in South Africa are regulated by the Council for Debt Collectors and the National Credit Act. They may not threaten you with arrest, make false statements about legal consequences, contact you more than is reasonable, or contact your employer without your consent. Report abusive collectors to the Council for Debt Collectors on 012 804 9808.
What the Law Says
Your Legal Foundation
Debt Collectors Act 114 of 1998
Section 10
“No debt collector shall in the exercise of their functions act in a manner that amounts to harassment, is misleading or constitutes an unfair business practice.”
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
Section 126B
“A debt collector may not threaten a consumer with action that the credit provider or debt collector does not intend to take or cannot lawfully take.”
Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008
Section 74
“A supplier or any person conducting business on behalf of a supplier must not engage in harassment, coercion, undue influence or pressure in collecting a debt.”
Immediate Steps
What to Do Right Now
1Ask for a written statement of the debt — the original creditor, the amount, and how it was calculated. You are entitled to this before making any payment.
2Record all contact — calls, messages, emails. Note date, time, what was said, and the collector's name/company.
3Send a written notice to the debt collector stating that all future communication must be in writing only and through your attorney (or your own address). This is lawful and must be respected.
4Report harassment to the Council for Debt Collectors: 012 804 9808 or registration@debtcol.co.za. They can suspend the collector's registration.
5If the debt is disputed or very old, consult a debt counsellor or Legal Aid before paying anything. Old debt (more than 3 years without acknowledgement) may be prescribed and legally unenforceable.
What to Say
Exact Words to Use
“"All further communication regarding this alleged debt must be in writing. I do not consent to phone calls. Any threats of arrest or seizure without a court order are unlawful under the Debt Collectors Act and NCA. I am reporting this interaction to the Council for Debt Collectors."”
Tone: Stated to the collector — also send by email or SMS
Common Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a debt collector have me arrested?
No. A debt collector has no power of arrest. Only a court can issue a warrant of arrest, and only for contempt of a court order — not for failing to pay a debt. Any threat of arrest to collect a debt is unlawful.
What is prescribed debt?
Under the Prescription Act, most unsecured debts prescribe (expire) after 3 years if you have not made a payment or acknowledged the debt in writing. Home loans prescribe after 30 years; court judgments after 30 years. If a debt collector is pursuing a debt older than 3 years, ask in writing when the last payment or written acknowledgment was made — they may have no legal claim.
Get Help Now
Resources & Helplines
Council for Debt Collectors
012 804 9808
Report abusive debt collectors.
National Credit Regulator
0860 627 627
Complaints about credit providers and collectors under the NCA.
The Advocate helps you practise the exact words to use in 149 real South African scenarios — grounded in constitutional law and Scripture. Free to start.