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What Happens to Debts When I Die?

January 24, 2025 by Jeff McKenna

The last thing anyone wants after the death of a family member is calls from debt collectors attempting to collect from the loved one’s estate. While some family members can be contacted by debt collectors, the family is protected from abusive, unfair, or deceptive practices.

Jeffery J. McKenna is a local attorney serving clients in Nevada, Arizona and Utah. He is a shareholder at the law firm of Barney McKenna & Olmstead, PC,  with offices in Mesquite and St. George. If you have questions you would like addressed in these articles, you can contact him at (435) 628-1711 or jmckenna@barney-mckenna.com.

Usually the estate is responsible for paying any debts the deceased may have left. If the estate does not have enough money, the debts will go unpaid. A debt collector may not turn to relatives to try to collect payment (unless they were co-signers or guarantors of the debt). However, the spouse of the decedent may have responsibility for any debts that were jointly held.

Debt collectors are allowed to contact the personal representative (executor) of the estate, the decedent’s spouse, or the decedent’s parents (if the decedent was a minor) to discuss the debts. They may not discuss the debts with anyone else. The only reason debt collectors may contact other relatives or friends is to get the name of the personal representative or spouse. But they cannot say anything about the decedent’s debt to those individuals or even say that they are debt collectors. 

When speaking with family members, debt collectors may not mislead the family into believing that the family members are responsible for the deceased person’s debts. They also can’t use abusive or offensive language.

Even if you are the person who is responsible for paying the estate’s debts, you can request that a debt collector stop contacting you. To do this, you need to send a letter to the debt collector asking the collector not to contact you again. You should keep a copy of the letter for your records and send the letter “certified” with a return receipt. 

Once the collector receives the letter, the collector can contact you only to tell you that there will be no further contact or to inform you of a lawsuit. Remember, the estate is still responsible for paying its debts to the extent that it can.

Probates and trust administrations come with inherent headaches but these do not need to be added to with improper debt collection.  If you have a problem with a debt collector, you can contact our office for help or you can contact the Utah Attorney General’s Office or the Federal Trade Commission at ftccomplaintassistant.gov.

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Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Jeff McKenna

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