⚖ Louisiana SOL • Established 2004 • Updated 2026

Louisiana Debt Collection Statute of Limitations — Complete Creditor’s Guide

Louisiana sets a 10 (liberative prescription)-year SOL on written contracts under La. C.C. art. 3499 and a 10 (under general personal action prescription)-year SOL on oral contracts. This guide covers every SOL period, tolling rules, accrual triggers, and creditor strategy under Louisiana law.

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Louisiana Debt Collection SOL video

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10 (liberative prescription) yrs

Written contract SOL

10 (under general personal action prescription) yrs

Oral contract SOL

10 years (renewable indefinitely)

Judgment lifespan

La. C.C. art. 3499

Primary statute

⚖ Louisiana’s Debt Collection Statute of Limitations Framework

The Louisiana debt collection statute of limitations sets the maximum time a creditor has to file a lawsuit to collect a debt. Once the SOL expires, the debt becomes time-barred — the creditor can no longer obtain a judgment through litigation, though the underlying obligation technically remains as an unenforceable moral debt.

Louisiana is the **only US civil-law jurisdiction** (derived from French and Spanish codes) — Louisiana uses ‘liberative prescription’ terminology rather than ‘statute of limitations,’ with substantively similar but procedurally distinct rules under the Louisiana Civil Code. **Louisiana’s 10-year personal action prescription** under La. C.C. art. 3499 is among the longer general contract periods in the country. **Critical Louisiana distinction:** Credit card debt is treated as an OPEN ACCOUNT under La. C.C. art. 3494 with only a **3-year prescription** — substantially shorter than the 10-year written contract period. **Louisiana judgments are renewable indefinitely** under La. C.C.P. art. 3501.

📊 Louisiana Debt Collection SOL Periods by Debt Type

Debt Type SOL Period Louisiana Statute / Source
Written contracts (general) 10 (liberative prescription) years La. C.C. art. 3499
Credit card debt 3 (open account under La. C.C. art. 3494) years La. C.C. art. 3499 (treated as written contract)
Auto loans / financed purchases 10 (liberative prescription) years La. C.C. art. 3499; UCC §10103
Medical debt (with written agreement) 10 (liberative prescription) years La. C.C. art. 3499
Oral contracts 10 (under general personal action prescription) years Louisiana’s oral contract statute
Promissory notes 5 (negotiable instruments) years Louisiana’s negotiable instruments framework
Domestic judgments (Louisiana-issued) 10 years (renewable indefinitely) Louisiana’s judgment statute
Foreign (sister-state) judgments domesticated in Louisiana 10 years (renewable indefinitely) (from Louisiana entry) Louisiana’s foreign judgment statute
⚠ Critical Louisiana SOL distinction: The classification of debt as written contract vs. oral contract vs. open account vs. liquidated debt produces very different SOL periods in Louisiana. Creditors should document the contract basis carefully and apply the correct SOL category — misclassification produces either premature abandonment of collectible debt or attempted suit on time-barred debt.

📅 When the Louisiana SOL Clock Starts Running

The SOL period begins on the date the cause of action accrues — meaning when the creditor has a legal right to sue. For most consumer debt in Louisiana, this is the date of the first missed payment that was not subsequently cured.

Acceleration Clauses

Many Louisiana contracts contain acceleration clauses providing that the entire balance becomes due upon default. Louisiana courts generally treat acceleration as creating a single cause of action accruing on the acceleration date — not on each subsequent missed payment. Creditors who delay acceleration may shorten their effective enforcement window.

Discovery Rule

For certain causes of action involving fraud or concealment, Louisiana courts may apply a discovery rule — the SOL clock starts when the creditor discovers, or reasonably should have discovered, the breach. The discovery rule rarely extends commercial debt-collection SOL, but it can apply when account fraud or identity theft is involved.

⏸ Tolling Rules — What Pauses Louisiana’s SOL

“Tolling” refers to legal doctrines that pause the SOL clock. Louisiana uses civil-law ‘prescription’ terminology rather than common-law ‘limitations.’ Defendant absence tolls prescription under La. C.C. art. 3469. Minority/disability tolls under art. 3468.

Bankruptcy Stay (11 U.S.C. §362)

Federal bankruptcy stay automatically tolls Louisiana SOL during the pendency of bankruptcy proceedings under 11 U.S.C. §108. Even if the discharge does not eliminate the debt (non-dischargeable obligations), the SOL clock pauses during the case.

Written Acknowledgment or New Promise

A written acknowledgment of the debt or a written new promise to pay generally restarts the SOL clock from the date of the acknowledgment. This is the most common SOL-extending event in Louisiana debt collection — but the specific rules vary by state, and oral acknowledgments are generally not sufficient.

💰 Partial Payment and Acknowledgment in Louisiana

Yes — partial payment generally interrupts (restarts) Louisiana’s prescription under La. C.C. art. 3464.

⚠ Creditor strategy implication: The partial-payment-restarts rule (or its absence) is one of the most consequential SOL distinctions between states. Louisiana creditors must understand precisely how partial payment affects Louisiana’s SOL clock — assumptions imported from other states routinely produce SOL miscalculation.

⚠ Time-Barred Debt and FDCPA Implications

After the Louisiana SOL expires, the debt becomes time-barred — no longer legally collectible through litigation.

Suit on Time-Barred Debt Is Prohibited

Filing a collection lawsuit on time-barred debt violates the federal FDCPA (15 U.S.C. §1692e and §1692f). The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Midland Funding LLC v. Johnson (2017) 581 U.S. 224 limited FDCPA liability for filing time-barred proofs of claim in bankruptcy, but suit on time-barred debt in Louisiana state court remains prohibited.

Louisiana-Specific Consumer-Protection Framework

Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices Act (La. R.S. §51:1401 et seq.) supplements federal FDCPA. Creditors operating in Louisiana face both federal FDCPA liability and any applicable state-law remedies for SOL-related violations.

Zombie Debt — Time-Barred Debt Sold to Junior Collectors

Time-barred debt is frequently sold to junior debt buyers at deep discounts. These buyers may attempt to collect through demand letters, calls, or even litigation. Under CFPB Regulation F (12 C.F.R. §1006.26), time-barred debt collectors must affirmatively disclose the time-barred status when applicable.

📋 Louisiana Judgment Enforcement Timeline

Once a creditor obtains a Louisiana judgment, the enforcement timeline shifts to the judgment-lifespan rules:

  • Louisiana judgment lifespan: 10 years (renewable indefinitely).
  • Louisiana judgment interest rate: Set annually by Louisiana Commissioner of Financial Institutions.
  • Enforcement remedies: Wage garnishment (where state law permits), bank attachment, real-property liens, vehicle levies, and other state-law remedies.

This judgment lifespan may substantially exceed the underlying contract SOL — making timely lawsuit filing critical. A creditor who allows the 10 (liberative prescription)-year contract SOL to expire loses access to litigation; a creditor who files within the SOL and obtains judgment gains the 10 years (renewable indefinitely) enforcement window.

🌐 Choice of Law and Cross-State Debt

When a Louisiana debtor incurred the debt in another state, or when an out-of-state creditor seeks to enforce in Louisiana, choice-of-law issues affect which SOL applies.

Louisiana courts may apply choice-of-law analysis based on (1) the location where the contract was executed, (2) the location where the debt accrued (typically where the debtor was located when payment was due), (3) any contractual choice-of-law provision, and (4) the borrowing-statute approach where Louisiana adopts the foreign state’s shorter SOL.

Practical example: A debt that accrued in another state with a shorter SOL period and the debtor moves to Louisiana — Louisiana courts may apply the shorter foreign SOL under borrowing-statute analysis. Creditors should not assume Louisiana’s 10 (liberative prescription)-year SOL automatically applies to debts that originated elsewhere.

🎯 Louisiana Creditor Strategy Under the SOL

Louisiana’s civil-law framework requires creditors to understand the open-account vs. personal-action distinction. Credit card debt typically falls under the shorter 3-year open-account prescription — creating significant time pressure compared to common-law states’ treatment. **Louisiana’s indefinite judgment renewal** creates exceptional long-tail value once a judgment is obtained. Post-Hurricane Katrina demographic shifts created substantial outmigration that may still affect SOL accrual analysis for older debts.

Skip Tracing Urgency

Locating the debtor’s current address, employment, and assets is time-sensitive in Louisiana. Effective skip tracing within the first 8 years of delinquency preserves the option to litigate before the SOL expires. People Locator Skip Tracing routinely handles Louisiana time-sensitive locate work for creditors approaching SOL deadlines.

Judgment Maximization

Because Louisiana judgments enjoy 10 years (renewable indefinitely) enforceability with Set annually by Louisiana Commissioner of Financial Institutions interest, creditors who file timely lawsuits convert contract claims into long-tail judgment enforcement opportunities. This judgment-conversion strategy is central to Louisiana debt collection economics.

SOL Economics — Why Timing Matters

The economic difference between filing within the SOL versus letting it expire is dramatic. A creditor who allows the Louisiana contract SOL to expire loses the right to obtain a judgment through litigation — the debt remains an unenforceable moral obligation. A creditor who files within the SOL and obtains judgment gains the full 10 years (renewable indefinitely) enforcement window with Set annually by Louisiana Commissioner of Financial Institutions interest accrual. Over the life of the judgment, accumulated interest often exceeds the original principal, particularly in jurisdictions with double-digit statutory rates.

For revolving credit accounts and installment loans, the SOL clock typically starts on the date of first uncured default — not on subsequent missed payments. This means creditors must monitor account delinquency from the original default date forward, not from the most recent payment attempt. Misunderstanding this accrual rule is one of the most common causes of inadvertent SOL expiration in Louisiana debt collection.

Sophisticated Louisiana creditors operate two parallel tracks: (1) workout and voluntary payment negotiations with the debtor through the early years of delinquency, and (2) litigation preparation including skip tracing, asset identification, and lawsuit filing if voluntary recovery does not materialize before the SOL approaches expiration. Maintaining both tracks simultaneously preserves all enforcement options.

Louisiana continues to operate under its distinctive civil-law framework. The 3-year open-account prescription for credit card debt has been actively litigated by the debt-buyer industry. Louisiana enacted limited data privacy provisions but no comprehensive CCPA-style statute.

Beyond Louisiana-specific developments, federal regulation continues to evolve. The CFPB’s Regulation F (12 C.F.R. §1006), effective November 2021, imposed detailed federal requirements that supplement Louisiana’s framework including mandatory time-barred debt disclosures, validation notice content requirements, and limits on contact frequency.

SOL Across Major Consumer Debt Categories

Louisiana creditors should track SOL treatment across each major consumer debt category. Credit card debt in Louisiana runs under the 3 (open account under La. C.C. art. 3494)-year period — applicable to both original-creditor accounts and debts sold to junior debt buyers. Auto loans and financed purchases generally fall under the 10 (liberative prescription)-year written contract SOL when documented by retail installment contracts. Medical debt typically runs under the same 10 (liberative prescription)-year written contract period where admission paperwork or financial responsibility agreements exist. Personal loans from banks, credit unions, and online lenders follow the 10 (liberative prescription)-year framework when documented.

Utility bills and similar service obligations in Louisiana may fall under shorter open-account periods rather than the full written contract SOL — creditors should analyze the underlying agreement before assuming the longer period applies. Rent obligations typically follow Louisiana’s written contract framework when a written lease exists. Mortgage deficiency judgments after foreclosure operate under specialized rules and timelines that interact with Louisiana’s general contract SOL.

⚠ Common Louisiana Creditor SOL Mistakes

The most frequent errors we see in Louisiana debt collection contexts:

  1. Misclassifying credit card debt — applying open-account SOL instead of written contract SOL produces incorrect deadline calculation.
  2. Assuming partial payment effects from other states — Louisiana’s rules on partial payment and acknowledgment differ from many states; importing assumptions creates miscalculation.
  3. Failing to apply choice-of-law analysis — when debt accrued out-of-state, the foreign state’s SOL may apply under borrowing-statute analysis.
  4. Delayed acceleration on installment loans — delayed acceleration may shorten the effective SOL window by triggering accrual on the acceleration date rather than original maturity.
  5. Suing on time-barred debt — creates federal FDCPA and state consumer-protection liability.
  6. Treating judgment SOL same as contract SOL — judgment enforceability (10 years (renewable indefinitely)) substantially exceeds the underlying contract SOL (10 (liberative prescription) years). Creditors who fail to convert contract claims to judgments lose the longer enforcement window.

🔒 FDCPA and Consumer-Protection Compliance

Louisiana creditors must comply with multiple consumer-protection frameworks:

  • Federal FDCPA (15 U.S.C. §1692 et seq.) — prohibits collection of time-barred debt through misleading representations, suit, or threats of suit.
  • CFPB Regulation F (12 C.F.R. §1006) — federal regulations effective November 2021 imposing detailed disclosure requirements.
  • Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices Act (La. R.S. §51:1401 et seq.) supplements federal FDCPA.
  • FTC enforcement — Federal Trade Commission consumer-protection enforcement including FDCPA-related actions.

Locate Louisiana Debtors Before the SOL Expires

Louisiana’s 10 (liberative prescription)-year written contract SOL means time matters. People Locator Skip Tracing has been finding Louisiana debtors since 2004 — current addresses, employer information for wage garnishment after judgment, asset searches, and full enforcement support. 24-hour turnaround on most cases. All searches under documented permissible purpose.

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❓ Frequently Asked Questions — Louisiana Debt Collection SOL

What is the statute of limitations for credit card debt in Louisiana?

3 (open account under La. C.C. art. 3494) from the date of first default. Louisiana courts treat credit card debt under the credit-card-specific framework described in La. C.C. art. 3499 and related statutes. Creditors must file collection lawsuits within this period or lose the right to pursue judgment through litigation.

What is the statute of limitations for written contracts in Louisiana?

10 (liberative prescription) years under La. C.C. art. 3499. This period applies to most consumer debt evidenced by signed agreements — credit card accounts, installment loans, retail credit, and similar obligations. The clock generally starts on the date of first uncured default.

What is the statute of limitations for oral contracts in Louisiana?

10 (under general personal action prescription) years. Verbal loan agreements and undocumented obligations face this aggressive limitations period. Without written documentation, creditors face both a shorter SOL and substantial proof challenges at litigation.

Does partial payment restart Louisiana’s debt collection SOL?

Yes — partial payment generally interrupts (restarts) Louisiana’s prescription under La. C.C. art. 3464. This is a critical rule for creditors managing long-term workout arrangements with debtors — the partial payment effect on the SOL determines whether accepting a small payment preserves or jeopardizes the enforcement window.

How long is a Louisiana civil judgment enforceable?

10 years (renewable indefinitely). Judgments accrue interest at Set annually by Louisiana Commissioner of Financial Institutions, producing substantial long-tail enforcement value. Converting a contract claim into a judgment is the most important strategic move available to creditors — it substantially extends the enforcement window beyond the underlying contract SOL.

What happens if a creditor sues on time-barred debt in Louisiana?

Filing suit on time-barred debt violates the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (15 U.S.C. §1692e and §1692f). Consumer-protection plaintiffs can recover statutory damages, actual damages, and attorney fees. Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices Act (La. R.S. §51:1401 et seq.) supplements federal FDCPA.

Can a time-barred debt be revived in Louisiana?

Yes, in many cases through written acknowledgment of the debt or a new written promise to pay. Even after the SOL has expired, a written acknowledgment by the debtor may restart the limitations clock. Junior debt buyers sometimes seek such acknowledgments through settlement offers — state regulators scrutinize these practices closely.

How does Louisiana handle debts that crossed state lines?

When the debt accrued in another state, Louisiana courts may apply choice-of-law analysis to determine which state’s SOL applies. Louisiana’s borrowing-statute approach (if applicable) may apply the shorter foreign-state SOL to prevent forum-shopping. Creditors enforcing cross-state debt must analyze both jurisdictions’ SOL frameworks.

What is the SOL for medical debt in Louisiana?

Generally the written contract SOL of 10 (liberative prescription) years where a written agreement (admission paperwork, financial responsibility agreement) exists between patient and provider. Without written agreement, the shorter oral contract SOL of 10 (under general personal action prescription) years may apply. State-specific medical debt protections may affect collection practices beyond the underlying SOL.

How can creditors preserve Louisiana’s debt enforcement options before SOL expires?

The most effective approach is to file suit within the SOL and obtain judgment, converting the contract SOL into the longer judgment enforcement window of 10 years (renewable indefinitely). Critical steps include timely skip tracing to locate the debtor, accurate SOL calculation from first default, and lawsuit filing well before the deadline. People Locator Skip Tracing supports Louisiana creditors with current-address location for time-sensitive enforcement.

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📅 Last Updated: 2026  ·  📋 Coverage: Louisiana’s SOL framework + federal FDCPA

Legal Disclaimer. This page provides general informational content about Louisiana’s debt collection statute of limitations framework and does not constitute legal advice. SOL calculations are fact-specific, and creditors should consult licensed Louisiana counsel before filing suit on any debt approaching the SOL deadline. Suit on time-barred debt creates substantial consumer-protection liability under federal and state law. This guide is intended for judgment creditors, debt collectors, attorneys, and enforcement professionals operating under FCRA, GLBA, and DPPA permissible-purpose frameworks. © 2026 People Locator Skip Tracing · Established 2004.