B2B Compliance Guide

Commercial Debt Collection in Louisiana

Everything you need to know about collecting B2B debts in Louisiana. Statute of limitations, licensing requirements, and how AgentCollect keeps you compliant automatically.

3 Years
Statute of Limitations (all contracts)
OFI License
Required for 3rd-party collectors
8am–9pm
Permitted Contact Hours (CT)
Civil Law
Unique Civil Code Jurisdiction

Louisiana B2B Debt Collection Rules

Louisiana is unique among US states — it is the only jurisdiction based on civil law tradition (derived from French and Spanish law) rather than common law. This affects how contracts are interpreted and how debts are collected. Louisiana's commercial economy spans energy, petrochemicals, shipping, and tourism.

Critical warning: Louisiana has one of the shortest prescription periods (statute of limitations) in the nation — only 3 years for commercial contracts under Civil Code Art. 3494. If you have unpaid B2B invoices in Louisiana, you must act within 3 years or the debt becomes unenforceable. Do not delay.

How Long You Have to Collect

Louisiana Civil Code — Liberative Prescription

Louisiana uses the term "liberative prescription" rather than "statute of limitations." The effect is the same: once the prescription period runs, the debt is no longer judicially enforceable.

Contract TypeTime LimitCode Section
Written contract3 yearsCC Art. 3494
Oral contract3 yearsCC Art. 3494
Open account (invoices)3 yearsCC Art. 3494
Account stated3 yearsCC Art. 3494
Promissory note5 yearsCC Art. 3498

Critical: The 3-year prescription for commercial invoices and contracts is among the shortest in the US. Prescription runs from the day payment was due. Acknowledgment of the debt or a partial payment interrupts prescription and restarts the clock.

Who Needs a License

Louisiana Office of Financial Institutions (OFI)

Louisiana requires third-party debt collectors to be licensed by the Louisiana Office of Financial Institutions (OFI) under the Louisiana Collection Agency regulation.

  • Third-party collectors must hold a Louisiana OFI Collection Agency license
  • Original creditors collecting their own debts generally do not need a license
  • License requires application, background check, bond, and OFI approval
  • Annual renewal required
  • Violations can result in license revocation, fines, and civil liability

How AgentCollect Handles This

  • AgentCollect operates under its own Louisiana OFI license — you don't need to obtain one
  • Our partnered attorneys are licensed and barred in Louisiana
  • All communications include required disclosures
  • Licensing status is verified and renewed annually

Laws That Apply to B2B Collections

Louisiana Civil Code — Contract Obligations

Unlike other US states, Louisiana contract law is governed by the Civil Code rather than common law. Key differences affect commercial debt collection.

  • Contracts interpreted under Civil Code Articles 1983–2057
  • Good faith obligation applies to performance and enforcement of all contracts
  • Extinctive prescription (time bar) is strictly applied by Louisiana courts
  • Interruption of prescription requires formal demand, acknowledgment, or partial payment

Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices Act

The Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law (La. R.S. 51:1401 et seq.) applies to commercial practices as well as consumer transactions.

  • No unfair or deceptive acts or practices in trade or commerce
  • Can apply to B2B deceptive collection practices
  • Private right of action with attorney fees and treble damages in egregious cases
  • Louisiana AG can investigate and prosecute commercial deception

Automatic Louisiana Compliance

RequirementHow AgentCollect Handles It
Contact hours (8am–9pm CT)AI agents auto-detect timezone from area code. Never calls outside permitted hours.
Validation noticeAutomatically sent within 30 days of first contact with all required disclosures.
3-year prescription periodLouisiana accounts flagged at 2.5 years — critical early warning before the 3-year SOL expires.
Louisiana OFI licensingAgentCollect holds its own Louisiana license. Clients don't need to obtain one.
Cease-and-desistImmediately stops all contact. Account moved to legal review queue.
Civil Code complianceLouisiana-specific Civil Code rules applied to all account handling in the state.

Louisiana B2B Debt Collection FAQ

What is the statute of limitations for B2B debt collection in Louisiana?
In Louisiana, the liberative prescription for commercial invoices and written or oral contracts is only 3 years (Louisiana Civil Code Art. 3494). This is one of the shortest in the US. Act on overdue B2B invoices well before this deadline.
Do I need a license to collect B2B debts in Louisiana?
Third-party debt collectors must be licensed by the Louisiana Office of Financial Institutions (OFI). Original creditors collecting their own debts generally do not need a license. AgentCollect operates under its own Louisiana OFI license.
Why is Louisiana's legal system different from other states?
Louisiana is the only US state based on the civil law tradition, derived from French and Spanish colonial law. Contracts are governed by the Louisiana Civil Code rather than English common law. This affects contract interpretation, prescription periods, and available remedies — which is why working with Louisiana-experienced counsel is essential.
Can I charge interest on unpaid B2B invoices in Louisiana?
Yes. Louisiana allows contractual interest rates between businesses. The legal rate of interest is 6% per year where no rate is specified (La. R.S. 9:3500). Commercial parties may contract for higher rates. Include interest terms in your contracts for maximum recovery.

Collecting B2B debts in Louisiana?

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B2B Debt Collection by State