Maine B2B Debt Collection Rules
Maine has a diverse commercial economy spanning fishing, forestry, manufacturing, tourism, and technology. Maine is notable for having a uniform 6-year statute of limitations across written contracts, oral contracts, and open accounts — which simplifies compliance tracking.
Key distinction: The federal FDCPA does not apply to B2B debts. Maine's Unfair Trade Practices Act has broader application than many states and can apply to commercial deception. Maine requires licensing for all third-party collectors regardless of whether the underlying debt is commercial or consumer.
How Long You Have to Collect
Maine Revised Statutes — Limitation of Actions
The statute of limitations determines how long a creditor has to file a lawsuit to collect a debt. Maine has a consistent 6-year period across most contract types.
| Contract Type | Time Limit | Code Section |
|---|---|---|
| Written contract | 6 years | 14 MRS §752 |
| Oral contract | 6 years | 14 MRS §752 |
| Open account (invoices) | 6 years | 14 MRS §752 |
| Account stated | 6 years | 14 MRS §752 |
| Promissory note | 6 years | 14 MRS §752 |
Note: Maine's uniform 6-year SOL across all contract types makes compliance tracking simpler. The clock starts from the date payment was due or the last account activity.
Who Needs a License
Maine Bureau of Consumer Credit Protection (BCCP)
Maine requires third-party debt collectors to be licensed under the Maine Collection Agency Act, overseen by the Maine Bureau of Consumer Credit Protection.
- Third-party collectors must hold a Maine Collection Agency license from the BCCP
- Original creditors collecting their own debts generally do not need a license
- License requires application, background check, bond, and BCCP approval
- Annual renewal required
- Maine has strong enforcement — violations can result in license revocation and civil liability
How AgentCollect Handles This
- AgentCollect operates under its own Maine BCCP license — you don't need to obtain one
- Our partnered attorneys are licensed and barred in Maine
- All communications include required disclosures
- Licensing status is verified and renewed annually
Laws That Apply to B2B Collections
Maine Unfair Trade Practices Act
The Maine Unfair Trade Practices Act (5 MRS §205-A et seq.) applies broadly to trade or commerce in Maine and has been applied in B2B contexts — broader than many state consumer protection acts.
- Prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce
- Can apply to B2B collection activities — broader reach than most state UTPAs
- Private right of action with attorney fees available
- Maine AG can investigate and prosecute violations
UCC Article 2 — Commercial Transactions
The Uniform Commercial Code governs most B2B transactions in Maine, treating both parties as sophisticated commercial entities.
- Governs sale of goods between businesses
- Allows contractual modification of remedies and limitations
- Permits higher interest rates than consumer transactions
- Commercial reasonableness standard applies
Automatic Maine Compliance
| Requirement | How AgentCollect Handles It |
|---|---|
| Contact hours (8am–9pm ET) | AI agents auto-detect timezone from area code. Never calls outside permitted hours. |
| Validation notice | Automatically sent within 30 days of first contact with all required disclosures. |
| Statute of limitations (6 yr) | Accounts past 6-year SOL are flagged and handled with modified approach. |
| Maine BCCP licensing | AgentCollect holds its own Maine license. Clients don't need to obtain one. |
| Cease-and-desist | Immediately stops all contact. Account moved to legal review queue. |
| Maine UTPA compliance | All collection activities adhere to Maine's broader unfair trade practices standards. |
Maine B2B Debt Collection FAQ
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