Virginia B2B Debt Collection Rules
Virginia's economy — anchored by government contracting, defense, technology, and financial services in the Northern Virginia/DC corridor — generates substantial B2B credit activity. Collecting unpaid commercial invoices requires compliance with the Virginia Debt Collection Act and the Virginia Consumer Protection Act.
Key distinction: The federal FDCPA does not apply to B2B debts. Virginia has different SOL periods depending on contract type: 5 years for written contracts, 3 years for oral contracts and open accounts. This distinction is critical for invoice-based businesses operating without formal signed agreements.
How Long You Have to Collect
Virginia Code — Limitation Periods
Virginia has important differences in SOL periods depending on whether the underlying agreement was written or oral. Invoice-based businesses should take careful note of the 3-year period that applies to open accounts.
| Contract Type | Time Limit | Code Section |
|---|---|---|
| Written contract | 5 years | Va. Code §8.01-246 |
| Oral contract | 3 years | Va. Code §8.01-246 |
| Open account (invoices) | 3 years | Va. Code §8.01-246 |
| Account stated | 3 years | Va. Code §8.01-246 |
| Promissory note | 5 years | Va. Code §8.01-246 |
Important: The clock starts from the date of the last activity on the account. The 3-year period for open accounts and oral contracts is shorter than many neighboring states — act quickly on aging invoices in Virginia.
Regulatory Requirements
Virginia Consumer Protection Act — Collection Practices
Virginia regulates debt collection conduct through the Virginia Consumer Protection Act (Va. Code §59.1-196 et seq.) and the Virginia Debt Collection Act. Third-party collectors must comply with professional conduct standards and are subject to enforcement by the Virginia Attorney General.
- Third-party collectors must comply with the Virginia Debt Collection Act and Consumer Protection Act
- Attorneys who regularly collect consumer debts are subject to additional oversight
- Virginia does not require a standalone collection agency license at the state level, but conduct standards are enforced
- Violations are subject to civil penalties and injunctions by the Attorney General
How AgentCollect Handles This
- AgentCollect operates in full compliance with the Virginia Debt Collection Act and Consumer Protection Act
- Our partnered attorneys are licensed and barred in Virginia
- All communications automatically include required disclosures
- Compliance posture is reviewed and updated annually
Laws That Apply to B2B Collections
Virginia Debt Collection Act
Virginia's Debt Collection Act prohibits unfair, deceptive, and abusive collection practices. While primarily consumer-focused, collectors engaging in B2B collections should maintain compliant practices across all accounts.
- Prohibits false or misleading representations about the debt or the collector's authority
- Bans threatening, harassing, or oppressive collection conduct
- Requires proper identification of the collector and the creditor
- Prohibits contact at unreasonable hours or with unreasonable frequency
Virginia Consumer Protection Act (Va. Code §59.1-196)
The Virginia Consumer Protection Act provides broad protections against deceptive and unfair practices. Courts may apply its provisions to small business or sole proprietor debts, making compliance essential for all B2B collectors.
- Prohibits fraudulent acts or practices in the conduct of consumer transactions
- May apply to B2B collections involving small businesses or sole proprietors
- Allows for actual damages plus civil penalties up to $2,500 per violation
- Attorney General has enforcement authority with injunctive powers
UCC Article 2 — Commercial Transactions
The Uniform Commercial Code governs most B2B transactions in Virginia. Unlike consumer protection laws, UCC assumes both parties are 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 Virginia Compliance
Every AgentCollect account is pre-configured for Virginia's specific requirements. No manual setup needed.
| 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 | Accounts past SOL (3 or 5 years depending on contract type) are flagged and handled with a modified approach. |
| Virginia compliance | Full compliance with the Virginia Debt Collection Act and Consumer Protection Act. Clients don't need separate legal review. |
| Cease-and-desist | Immediately stops all contact. Account moved to legal review queue. |
| Call recording disclosure | Virginia is a one-party consent state. Calls are recorded for compliance and quality purposes. |
Virginia B2B Debt Collection FAQ
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