State complaint profile
Debt collection complaints in Maine
1,491 CFPB complaints filed against 367 debt collectors active in Maine.
- Complaints
- 1,491
- Collectors
- 367
- Per 100k
- 107
This data comes from the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database and reflects consumer complaints, not proven violations.
Maine Debt Collection Laws
Federal FDCPA protections apply. Some states have additional laws — contact the Maine Attorney General for state-specific information.
Insights: Debt Collection in Maine
Consumers in Maine have filed 1,491 CFPB debt collection complaints against 367 different collectors — a rate of 106.8 complaints per 100,000 residents. Complaint volume reflects both the size of the collection industry operating in Maine and the willingness of residents to escalate disputes through the federal regulatory process rather than handle them privately with the collector.
Higher per-capita complaint counts in some states correlate with a combination of stronger state-level consumer-protection statutes (which often add private rights of action on top of the federal FDCPA), more active state attorneys general, and more public outreach from the CFPB itself — not necessarily worse collector behavior. The pattern can also reflect debt-buyer concentration: states where large secondary-market buyers route accounts tend to generate elevated complaint flow regardless of the underlying account's origin.
The most-complained-about collector active in Maine is The Thomas Agency, Inc., but national-scale buyers and servicers typically dominate complaint volume in every state. For the practical Maine-specific protections that go beyond the federal FDCPA — licensing requirements, statute-of-limitations rules, and exempt-property thresholds — see the state rights note above and our FDCPA rights guide.
Active Debt Collectors — Page 8
Sorted by most complaintsNortheast Receivables Management, LLC
CThe Hamilton Law Association
FCollection Solutions Inc.
BShechtman Halperin Savage, LLP
BHarbor Front Acquisitions LLC (Closed)
AThe Borland Law Firm, LLC (Closed)
CMitsubishi Motors North America, Inc.
FSusan J. Szwed, P.A.
AFINANCIAL MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS (NY)
AEchelon Financial, Inc.
BBendett & McHugh, P.C.
BPennie Mgmt LLC
ASombrero Capital LLC
ANational Credit Managers Association
AFinance Authority of Maine
ABYDcash LLC
AGrads Financial
ARead our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.
Related
About These Collectors
Every collector listed for Maine appears here because at least one consumer from this state filed a complaint with the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) naming that company. The page is a per-state slice of the federal Consumer Complaint Database. Most entries are credit-reporting agencies (Equifax, TransUnion, Experian) and large national debt-buyers (Encore Capital, Portfolio Recovery, Resurgent Capital). Smaller regional collectors appear only when complaint volume from Maine residents passes the dataset's inclusion threshold.
What the Grade Means
Each company's letter grade combines four signals: total CFPB complaint volume normalized against fleet medians (size-adjusted), timely-response rate (the share of complaints answered within the federal 15-day window), monetary-or-non-monetary relief rate (the share of complaints resolved with corrective action versus closed with explanation only), and consumer-narrative tone (a sentiment signal extracted from the redacted public complaint text). The composite is bucketed A through F; the lowest 10% of scores fleet-wide land in F. Click any company to see the breakdown.
Filing a Complaint as a Maine Resident
If you believe a collector named on this page has violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) or otherwise mishandled your account, you have three parallel channels. First, the CFPB at consumerfinance.gov/complaint — the federal channel that powers this dataset. Second, the Maine attorney general's consumer protection division, which enforces state-level debt-collection statutes. Third, the state banking-and-finance regulator (which may license debt collectors operating in Maine). The three channels serve different purposes and can be pursued in parallel; we recommend the CFPB first because it produces a public record and a required company response within 15 days.
Methodology Note
State-of-residence in the CFPB record is the consumer's address at the time of complaint, not the collector's address. National collectors operate from a small number of corporate centers (typically Texas, Arizona, Florida, California) but appear on every state's per-state page when consumers from that state file. The state ranking and the per-state collector counts therefore reflect consumer experience, not corporate footprint. For collector headquarters and licensing detail, see the individual collector detail page.
Reading This Page Alongside the National View
Every collector listed here also appears on the national rankings page and on the recent-12-month leaderboard. The state-page slice gives you the Maine-specific complaint volume and per-state collector mix; the national pages give you the full nationwide context for understanding whether a collector's behavior in Maine reflects a structural pattern or a localized issue. We recommend reading both before deciding whether to file a complaint or pursue state-channel remedies — a collector with high state volume but low national volume points toward a regional portfolio acquisition or enforcement gap, while a collector with high state AND national volume points toward a structural compliance issue.
What the Per-Capita Rate Means
The complaints-per-100,000-residents rate normalizes absolute complaint volume against Maine's population, which makes cross-state comparison meaningful. Populous states naturally generate higher absolute complaint counts, but per-capita rate surfaces states where consumers are disproportionately likely to file federal complaints. A high per-capita rate typically reflects some combination of (a) higher uninsured-rate medical-debt activity, (b) weaker state-level debt-collection licensing enforcement, (c) longer statute-of-limitations periods on consumer debt, or (d) active consumer-advocacy infrastructure that directs residents toward the federal complaint channel. None of these factors implies misconduct by any specific collector — they shape the volume at which consumers in a state are willing and able to file complaints with the federal government.
| Publisher | Kiznis Studio |
| Sources | the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database |