Tennessee Debt Collection Statute of Limitations — Complete Creditor Guide
SOL periods by debt type, clock-start rules, tolling provisions, revival rules, zombie debt protections, and judgment enforcement — everything creditors, collectors, and attorneys need to know about Tennessee.
📑 Table of Contents
📊 Tennessee Statute of Limitations by Debt Type
The statute of limitations for debt collection in Tennessee varies by the type of obligation. Creditors and collectors must correctly classify the underlying debt before calculating whether the right to sue is still alive. Tennessee uses a uniform 6-year SOL for all standard consumer debt contracts, simplifying SOL calculations but requiring timely action.
| 📋 Debt Type | ⏱️ SOL | 🔑 Common Examples | ⚠️ Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Written Contract | 6 years | Auto loans, personal loans, medical bills with signed agreements, retail installment contracts | Clock starts at: date of last payment or date the account was charged off |
| Oral Contract | 6 years | Verbal agreements, informal personal loans without documentation | Harder to prove — any written evidence strengthens enforceability |
| Promissory Note | 6 years | Formal loan notes, business promissory notes, mortgage notes | Same period as written contracts in TN |
| Open Account / Credit Card | 6 years | Credit cards, revolving credit lines, store charge accounts | Most consumer collection activity — clock starts at: date of last payment or date the account was charged off |
| Judgment | 10 years | Court judgments, domesticated out-of-state judgments | prime+2% annual interest; must renew before expiration |
⏱️ When Does the Tennessee Statute of Limitations Clock Start?
In Tennessee, the statute of limitations clock starts on the date of last payment or date the account was charged off. This “accrual date” is the most critical calculation in any Tennessee collection matter — and it is frequently contested between creditors and debtors.
For credit card and revolving account debt, the clock typically starts on the date of the last payment. Where no payment was ever made, it starts when the first payment became due and was missed. Some Tennessee courts also recognize the charge-off date as an alternative accrual point — the specific rule depends on the account agreement and applicable Tennessee precedent.
🔍 Practical Clock Calculation for Tennessee Accounts
Step 1: Identify the date of last payment from the original account ledger — not the collection file, which frequently contains inaccurate dates. Step 2: Add the applicable SOL period from the table above. Step 3: The resulting date is the last day on which suit can legally be filed in Tennessee. If that date has passed, the debt is time-barred — though non-legal collection may still be permissible (see Zombie Debt section below).
Creditors who use professional skip tracing to locate Tennessee debtors should complete that process at least 60–90 days before the SOL expiration date — allowing sufficient time to identify a process server, file the complaint, and achieve service of process before the window closes.
⏸️ What Pauses the Tennessee Statute of Limitations? (Tolling)
Tolling suspends the running of the SOL clock. When a tolling condition exists, the time during which it persists does not count against the creditor. When the condition ends, the clock resumes from where it left off — the time already elapsed is not lost.
The following circumstances toll the statute of limitations for debt collection in Tennessee:
- Debtor Absence from Tennessee: If the debtor leaves Tennessee after the debt becomes due, time spent outside the state does not count against the SOL. The clock pauses until they return. Skip tracing to document a debtor’s departure and return dates provides critical evidentiary support for tolling arguments in Tennessee courts.
- Legal Incapacity or Disability: If the debtor is a minor or legally incapacitated when the debt becomes due, the SOL does not begin running until the disability is removed.
- Fraudulent Concealment: If the debtor actively conceals their whereabouts or fraudulently hides the nature of a claim, Tennessee courts may toll the SOL for the period of concealment. This doctrine is applied narrowly but is relevant in cases of deliberate debtor evasion.
🔄 Can a Time-Barred Debt Be Revived in Tennessee?
Yes — under specific circumstances, a debt that has passed the statute of limitations in Tennessee can be “revived,” restarting the full SOL period from scratch. Revival rules are among the most consequential — and least understood — aspects of Tennessee debt collection law.
✅ What Revives Debt in Tennessee
- Voluntary Partial Payment: Making any payment on a time-barred debt in Tennessee restarts the full SOL. Even a small payment restarts the entire clock. Collection staff must understand this before accepting any payment on a near-expired TN account.
- Written Acknowledgment: A signed, written statement by the debtor acknowledging the debt and their obligation to pay restarts the full SOL in Tennessee. The acknowledgment must be clear, unambiguous, and signed by the debtor — not a third party — to be legally effective.
🚫 What Does NOT Revive Debt in Tennessee
- Disputing the Debt in Writing: A debtor who disputes a debt does not thereby revive it — even if they acknowledge its existence while disputing the amount. The communication must constitute an unambiguous acknowledgment of both the debt and the obligation to pay.
- Third-Party Statements: Only the debtor or their authorized legal representative can revive the SOL in Tennessee. Statements by family members, employers, or co-habitants do not restart the clock.
🧟 Zombie Debt and Time-Barred Collections in Tennessee
“Zombie debt” refers to old obligations that have passed the statute of limitations — legally unenforceable through the courts but still subject to non-legal collection attempts. In Tennessee, both federal and state law govern what collectors can and cannot do with time-barred debt.
⚖️ Tennessee Zombie Debt Legal Framework
Time-barred debt collection in Tennessee is governed by the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act (T.C.A. §47-18-104). Tennessee’s CPA prohibits unfair or deceptive acts in trade or commerce. The Tennessee Attorney General has used this statute against debt collectors who file or threaten time-barred lawsuits.
Under the federal FDCPA, which applies in all states including Tennessee, collectors must not: (1) file or threaten to file a lawsuit to collect a time-barred debt; (2) misrepresent the legal status of a debt as enforceable when it is not; (3) use any false, deceptive, or misleading representation in connection with collection; or (4) imply that legal action is imminent or likely when none can lawfully be taken.
🏛️ Tennessee Judgment Statute of Limitations & Enforcement
Once a court judgment is entered in Tennessee, a separate and longer statute of limitations governs how long that judgment remains enforceable. A judgment is far more powerful than an unpaid debt: it creates a lien on real property, enables Tennessee wage garnishment, allows bank account levies, and accrues interest at the statutory rate.
| Factor | TN Rule | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Judgment SOL | 10 years | Long enforcement window — set calendar reminders well before expiration |
| Post-Judgment Interest | prime+2% per year | Accrues from date of entry on unpaid principal; adds to collectible balance continuously |
| Renewal | Tennessee judgments last 10 years and must be renewed by suit before expiration. Interest accrues at prime + 2%. | Calendar management is critical — missed renewal = extinguished judgment |
| Wage Garnishment | Tennessee wage garnishment | Most effective enforcement tool for employed debtors |
| Asset Levies | Tennessee asset exemptions | Skip trace required to identify bank accounts and non-exempt property |
Tennessee’s 10-year judgment SOL with compounding variable interest rewards patient creditors. The state’s growing Nashville and Memphis metro areas generate significant collection volume.
🔍 Skip Tracing and SOL Strategy in Tennessee
The statute of limitations creates a hard deadline that cannot be negotiated or extended except through the legal doctrines described above. For Tennessee creditors, the practical implication is straightforward: every day without a current debtor address is a day closer to losing the legal right to collect.
Consider the enforcement timeline for a Tennessee credit card account: if the last payment was made 5 years ago, you have approximately one year remaining to file suit. In that window, you need to: (1) locate the debtor through professional skip tracing; (2) identify a Tennessee process server; (3) file the complaint; (4) achieve valid service of process; and (5) obtain a default or judgment. That is a tight timeline — and it collapses entirely if you cannot locate the debtor.
For creditors already holding Tennessee judgments, skip tracing provides the intelligence needed to execute: bank account identification for levy, employment verification for Tennessee wage garnishment, and non-exempt asset identification for property levies. None of these enforcement mechanisms work without current, verified location data that People Locator Skip Tracing delivers within 24 hours.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions — Tennessee Debt Collection SOL
⚖️ Tennessee Debt Collection — Professional Skip Tracing
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