What to Do If You Receive a Collection Letter for a Loan You Never Took

Receiving a collection letter for a loan you never took can be frightening, especially if it threatens a lawsuit, barangay action, “field visitation,” police involvement, or damage to your credit record. In the Philippines, however, a collection letter is only a demand. It is not a court judgment, it does not automatically prove that you owe money, and it does not give the sender the right to harass you or force you to pay. Your immediate goal is to preserve evidence, avoid accidentally admitting liability, require the collector to prove the debt, and report fraud or abusive collection practices to the proper Philippine agency.

What a Collection Letter Means in the Philippines

A collection letter, also called a demand letter, is a written notice claiming that you owe money and asking you to pay. It may come from:

  • A bank or credit card issuer
  • A lending company or online lending platform
  • A financing company
  • A collection agency
  • A law office acting for a creditor
  • A debt buyer or third-party collector
  • A scammer pretending to be any of the above

A legitimate demand letter usually contains the name of the creditor, account or loan reference number, claimed amount, due date, basis of the claim, and instructions for payment or dispute.

But a letter alone does not prove that you borrowed money. If you never applied for, received, signed, authorized, guaranteed, co-made, or benefited from the alleged loan, you should treat the matter as a disputed debt and possibly as identity theft or fraud.

You Are Not Automatically Liable Just Because Your Name Appears on a Loan

Under the Civil Code of the Philippines, obligations generally arise from law, contracts, quasi-contracts, crimes, or quasi-delicts. For an ordinary loan, the collector usually relies on a contract: a loan agreement, promissory note, credit card agreement, online loan application, electronic consent record, or similar document.

This matters because a person cannot be forced to pay a loan merely because a company says so. The creditor must be able to show a legal basis for the obligation.

In practical terms, a legitimate lender should be able to produce evidence such as:

  • The loan application or signed agreement
  • The borrower’s verified identity documents used during application
  • The disclosure statement required for credit transactions
  • Proof of disbursement to your bank account, e-wallet, card, or nominated recipient
  • OTP, IP address, device, mobile number, or app records for online loans
  • A statement of account showing how the amount was computed
  • Assignment documents if the debt was sold to a collection agency
  • Written authority if a third-party collector or law office is acting for the lender

If they cannot provide a reasonable explanation and documentation, you should not pay simply to “make it go away.”

Legal Bases That Protect You

Civil Code: A Loan Must Have a Legal Basis

Article 1157 of the Civil Code states that obligations arise from law, contracts, quasi-contracts, acts or omissions punished by law, and quasi-delicts. Article 1159 further provides that obligations arising from contracts have the force of law between the contracting parties and must be complied with in good faith.

The key phrase is between the contracting parties. If you were not a borrower, co-maker, guarantor, surety, authorized cardholder, or person who actually received the money, the collector must explain why you are being treated as liable.

Rules on Evidence: The Creditor Must Prove Its Claim

In a collection case, the claimant carries the burden of proving the facts that support its demand. Under Rule 131 of the Rules on Evidence, burden of proof is the duty of a party to present evidence on the facts necessary to establish a claim or defense.

For ordinary readers, this means: if the lender sues you, it cannot win by accusation alone. It must present admissible proof that you owe the debt.

Truth in Lending Act: Credit Terms Must Be Disclosed

The Truth in Lending Act, Republic Act No. 3765, requires disclosure of finance charges in credit transactions. If the alleged loan is real but the amount being demanded includes unclear interest, penalties, service fees, collection charges, or rollover charges, you may ask for a complete computation and disclosure statement.

This law is especially relevant where the letter demands a much larger amount than the supposed principal loan.

Lending Company Regulation Act and Financing Company Act

If the sender is a lending company, it should be regulated under the Lending Company Regulation Act of 2007, Republic Act No. 9474. If it is a financing company, the relevant law is the Financing Company Act, Republic Act No. 8556.

These companies are generally supervised by the Securities and Exchange Commission for registration, authority to operate, and unfair collection practices.

SEC Rules Against Unfair Debt Collection

The Securities and Exchange Commission issued SEC Memorandum Circular No. 18, Series of 2019, which prohibits unfair debt collection practices by financing companies and lending companies.

Common prohibited practices include:

  • Threats, intimidation, or abusive language
  • False representation that nonpayment is a criminal offense
  • Threatening arrest without legal basis
  • Public shaming
  • Contacting third persons who are not guarantors, co-makers, or authorized contacts in a harassing manner
  • Using false or misleading representations to collect
  • Repeatedly contacting the borrower at unreasonable times or in an abusive way

Even if a person truly owes money, collectors must still follow lawful collection methods. If you never took the loan, abusive collection becomes even more serious.

Data Privacy Act: Your Personal Data Cannot Be Misused

The Data Privacy Act of 2012, Republic Act No. 10173, protects personal information. If your name, phone number, ID, selfie, contacts, address, employer, or family information was used without authority to create or collect a loan, this may involve a data privacy violation.

The National Privacy Commission has also warned against online lenders harvesting phone contacts or using personal data for harassment. The NPC’s complaint process requires a filled-out complaint form, supporting evidence, and usually notarization before filing through the allowed channels.

Cybercrime and Criminal Laws May Apply

If someone used your identity, documents, mobile number, e-wallet, or online account to obtain a loan, the situation may involve criminal conduct.

Depending on the facts, possible laws include:

  • Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012, Republic Act No. 10175, especially for computer-related fraud, identity theft, or online threats
  • Revised Penal Code provisions on falsification, if documents or signatures were forged
  • Revised Penal Code provisions on estafa, if deceit was used to obtain money
  • Grave threats, coercion, unjust vexation, or cyber libel, if collectors use threats, humiliation, or defamatory online posts

A police blotter alone does not erase the debt record, but it helps document that you are denying the loan and reporting possible fraud.

What to Do Immediately After Receiving the Letter

1. Do Not Ignore It, But Do Not Panic-Pay

Ignoring the letter can allow the problem to grow, especially if the lender reports the account to credit databases or files a small claims case. But paying even a small “settlement” can be misunderstood as acknowledgment.

Avoid saying or writing:

  • “I will pay later.”
  • “Please reduce my loan.”
  • “I admit the loan but cannot pay.”
  • “I will settle if you stop calling.”
  • “I borrowed but not that much.”

Instead, use clear dispute language:

“I dispute this alleged debt. I did not apply for, receive, authorize, guarantee, or benefit from this loan. Please provide documentary proof of your claim and stop treating the account as admitted.”

2. Preserve All Evidence

Create a folder, physical or digital, and save:

Evidence Why It Matters
Collection letter and envelope Shows sender, date, address, reference number, and threats
Emails and text messages Proves the exact wording and timeline
Screenshots of app messages or social media posts Useful for SEC, NPC, PNP, or NBI complaints
Call logs Shows repeated or abusive collection attempts
Voicemails or recordings, if available Helps prove threats or misrepresentation
IDs or documents allegedly used Helps establish identity theft or forgery
Proof you did not receive funds Bank/e-wallet statements may show no disbursement
Police blotter or complaint receipts Shows you formally disputed and reported the matter

Do not edit screenshots. Take full-screen screenshots showing date, time, sender, number, and message content. Back them up.

3. Verify the Sender

Before giving any personal information, verify who is contacting you.

Check:

  • Is the creditor registered with the SEC, BSP, or another regulator?
  • Is the company name complete, or only an app/brand name?
  • Does the letter provide a physical office address?
  • Is the law office real and reachable through official channels?
  • Is the payment channel under the creditor’s name, or under a random individual?
  • Is the collector asking for “processing fees,” “clearance fees,” or payment to a personal GCash/Maya account?

Be careful with collection letters that use generic law office names, fake police threats, or payment instructions to personal accounts.

For lending and financing companies, you can check SEC resources and submit concerns through the SEC i-Message portal.

4. Send a Written Dispute and Request for Validation

Respond in writing. Email is usually best because it creates a timestamp. If the amount is large or the sender is aggressive, consider sending by courier as well.

Your dispute letter should request:

  1. Full name of the creditor and collector
  2. SEC/BSP registration details, if applicable
  3. Loan agreement or promissory note
  4. Copy of the disclosure statement and amortization schedule
  5. Proof of identity verification used in the alleged application
  6. Proof of disbursement, including recipient account details
  7. Complete statement of account
  8. Basis for interest, penalties, and collection fees
  9. Authority of the collection agency or law office
  10. Confirmation that collection activity and credit reporting will be suspended while the debt is disputed

Keep the tone calm and factual. Do not insult the collector. The goal is to create a clean paper trail.

5. Check Whether Your Identity Was Used

If the collector claims you applied online, ask what information was used:

  • Mobile number
  • Email address
  • Device ID
  • IP address
  • Selfie or liveness check
  • Uploaded ID
  • Bank account or e-wallet number
  • Employer
  • Emergency contacts
  • Delivery or residence address

If any information is unfamiliar, state that clearly. If some information is yours but you did not apply, it may mean your personal data was compromised.

Practical next steps include:

  • Change passwords for your email, banking apps, e-wallets, and telco accounts
  • Enable two-factor authentication
  • Replace compromised SIMs or report unauthorized SIM use
  • Check whether your lost ID was used
  • Report suspicious e-wallet or bank transactions immediately
  • Monitor future collection messages using the same identity details

6. Get Your Credit Report and Dispute Wrong Entries

A false loan can affect future applications for credit cards, housing loans, car loans, or business financing.

The Credit Information Corporation was created under Republic Act No. 9510, the Credit Information System Act. The CIC has an Online Dispute Resolution System for disputed, erroneous, incomplete, or outdated credit information.

If the alleged loan appears in your credit report:

  1. Get a copy of your credit report through authorized CIC channels.
  2. Note the credit report transaction reference number.
  3. File a dispute through the CIC Online Dispute Resolution System.
  4. Attach your dispute letter, collection letter, IDs, police blotter if any, and proof that you did not receive the loan proceeds.
  5. Follow up until the submitting financial institution responds.

Do not wait until a bank rejects your loan application. Credit record disputes can take time because the lender or submitting entity must verify the disputed data.

Sample Dispute Letter

You may adapt this format:

Date: [Insert date]

To: [Name of creditor / collection agency / law office]

Subject: Formal Dispute of Alleged Loan Account No. [reference number]

I received your collection letter dated [date] claiming that I owe [amount] for an alleged loan.

I formally dispute this alleged debt. I did not apply for, receive, authorize, guarantee, co-make, or benefit from this loan. I also do not admit liability for the amount stated in your letter.

Please provide the following documents and information:

1. Copy of the loan application, loan agreement, promissory note, and disclosure statement;
2. Proof of identity verification used for the alleged loan;
3. Proof of disbursement, including the bank, e-wallet, or payment channel where the loan proceeds were released;
4. Complete statement of account and computation of the claimed amount;
5. Legal basis for all interest, penalties, fees, and collection charges;
6. Proof of authority if you are collecting on behalf of another creditor; and
7. Confirmation that you will suspend collection activity and any negative credit reporting while this debt is disputed.

Please communicate with me only in writing through [email/address]. Do not contact my relatives, employer, friends, or other third parties, as I do not authorize disclosure of this disputed matter to them.

All rights and remedies are reserved.

Sincerely,

[Name]
[Contact details]

Where to File Complaints in the Philippines

The correct agency depends on who is collecting and what they did.

Situation Where to Go What to Prepare
Lending company, financing company, or online lending app is harassing you Securities and Exchange Commission Complaint narrative, screenshots, call logs, company/app name, collection letter
Bank, credit card issuer, e-wallet, or BSP-supervised institution is involved Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Proof you first complained to the institution, account details, written response or lack of response
Your personal data, contacts, ID, or photos were misused National Privacy Commission Notarized complaint form, evidence, ID, screenshots, data misuse details
Identity theft, fake account, threats, cyber harassment, or fraud PNP Anti-Cybercrime Group or NBI Cybercrime Division Screenshots, links, numbers, devices, affidavits, blotter, IDs
False credit report entry Credit Information Corporation Credit report reference number, dispute documents, proof of error
Actual court summons received The court named in the summons Verified response, evidence, IDs, copies of all documents

BSP Complaints for Banks and Other BSP-Supervised Institutions

For banks and BSP-supervised institutions, the BSP generally expects consumers to complain first through the institution’s Financial Consumer Protection Assistance Mechanism. If unresolved, the complaint may be escalated through the BSP Consumer Assistance Mechanism, including the BSP Online Buddy or email channels described on the BSP Consumer Assistance page.

NPC Complaints for Data Privacy Violations

For privacy issues, the NPC explains its process on its filing a complaint page. In practice, prepare a clear timeline, attach screenshots, identify the respondent, and have the complaint form notarized when required.

SEC Complaints for Lending and Financing Companies

For lending and financing companies, the SEC is the main regulator. Complaints usually become stronger when you identify the registered corporate name, not just the app name. Many borrowers only know the app brand, but the SEC will need the company or operator behind it if available.

What If They Threaten to File a Small Claims Case?

A lender may file a small claims case for a money claim such as a loan. Under the Supreme Court’s Rules on Expedited Procedures in the First Level Courts, small claims cover money claims up to ₱1,000,000 before first-level courts such as the Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Trial Courts in Cities, Municipal Trial Courts, and Municipal Circuit Trial Courts.

If you receive an actual court summons, do not ignore it. A court summons is different from a collection letter.

You should:

  1. Read the summons carefully.
  2. Check the deadline for filing your response.
  3. Prepare your evidence showing that you did not take the loan.
  4. Attach your dispute letter, police blotter, bank/e-wallet statements, and identity theft evidence.
  5. Attend the scheduled hearing.

In small claims, lawyers generally do not appear for the parties during the hearing, except in limited situations allowed by the rules. The process is designed to be faster and simpler, but you still need to respond properly.

Important: Do not skip the hearing because “the debt is fake.” If you fail to participate, the court may proceed based on the claimant’s evidence.

Can You Be Arrested for Not Paying a Loan?

As a general rule, no. The Philippine Constitution prohibits imprisonment for debt. A collection agent cannot truthfully say that police will arrest you merely because you did not pay a civil loan.

However, criminal liability may arise from separate acts, such as:

  • Using a fake identity
  • Forging documents
  • Issuing checks under circumstances covered by law
  • Committing fraud or estafa
  • Using another person’s data to obtain money
  • Making threats or defamatory posts during collection

If you never took the loan, the more relevant issue may be that someone else committed fraud using your identity.

Common Scenarios and What They Mean

Someone Used Your Lost ID to Borrow Money

File a police blotter or cybercrime complaint as soon as possible. Send the collector a copy only if appropriate, but redact sensitive details. Ask for the loan application, disbursement account, selfie/liveness check, and contact information used.

If the ID was lost before the loan date, mention that in your dispute letter.

Your Number Was Listed as an Emergency Contact

Being an emergency contact does not automatically make you liable. You are not a debtor unless you signed as borrower, co-maker, guarantor, or surety, or otherwise legally assumed the obligation.

Tell the collector in writing that you are not the borrower and demand that they stop contacting you except to correct their records.

A Relative Borrowed Using Your Name

This is sensitive but common. If you did not authorize the loan, you may still dispute it. The lender must prove your consent and participation. Family relationship alone does not make you liable.

If your ID, signature, or personal data was used without permission, consider filing a police report even if the person involved is a relative. A written record may be necessary to clear your name.

A Collector Contacts Your Employer

This may violate SEC rules against unfair debt collection and may also raise privacy issues if the collector disclosed the alleged debt. Save screenshots, call logs, HR messages, and witness statements.

Write to the collector demanding that workplace contact stop immediately unless legally required through proper court process.

The Letter Comes From a Law Office

A law office may send a demand letter for a client, but it still must be truthful and professional. A lawyer’s letter does not prove the debt. Ask for the same validation documents.

If the letter contains false threats of arrest, public shaming, or other improper statements, preserve it. Depending on the facts, it may be relevant to a complaint.

The Collector Offers a “Discount” If You Pay Today

Do not pay just because the offer sounds cheaper than fighting. If the debt is not yours, even a discounted payment can create confusion later.

Instead, respond: “I dispute the debt and request validation.”

Practical Timeline

Stage Usual Timeframe What You Should Do
Receipt of collection letter Day 1 Save evidence and verify sender
Written dispute Within 3–7 days if possible Send email/courier dispute and request documents
Follow-up if no response 7–15 days after dispute Send second notice and prepare complaints
Agency complaint As soon as evidence is ready File with SEC, BSP, NPC, CIC, PNP, or NBI as applicable
Credit report dispute Once false entry appears or is suspected Use CIC dispute process
Court summons, if filed Deadline stated in summons File response and attend hearing

Timelines vary widely. Some companies correct records quickly after a formal dispute. Others ignore disputes until a regulator becomes involved. The most important thing is to create a written record early.

Documents to Prepare

Prepare scanned copies and printed copies of:

  • Valid government ID
  • Collection letter and envelope
  • Screenshots of texts, emails, app notifications, social media messages
  • Call logs and phone numbers used by collectors
  • Written dispute letter and proof of sending
  • Any reply from the creditor or collector
  • Bank or e-wallet statements showing no loan proceeds received
  • Police blotter, if identity theft or fraud is suspected
  • NPC, SEC, BSP, CIC, PNP, or NBI complaint receipts, if filed
  • Affidavits from relatives, employer, or friends contacted by collectors
  • Copy of lost ID report, if relevant

For notarized complaints or affidavits, bring a valid ID and sign before the notary public. Do not sign blank affidavits or documents prepared by the collector.

Mistakes to Avoid

  • Do not pay without validation if you genuinely did not take the loan.
  • Do not admit the debt in texts, calls, or emails.
  • Do not ignore a real court summons.
  • Do not send more personal documents than necessary to an unverified collector.
  • Do not negotiate by phone only. Keep everything in writing.
  • Do not delete messages, even if they are stressful or embarrassing.
  • Do not rely only on a police blotter to fix credit records; you may still need to dispute with the lender and CIC.
  • Do not assume an app name is the legal company name. Try to identify the registered operator.
  • Do not let collectors speak to your employer or relatives unchecked if they are disclosing a disputed debt.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I do first if I receive a collection letter for a loan I never took?

Save the letter, take screenshots of all related messages, verify the sender, and send a written dispute stating that you did not apply for, receive, authorize, guarantee, or benefit from the loan. Ask for proof of the debt before discussing any payment.

Can a collection agency force me to pay if the loan is not mine?

No. A collection agency must have a legal basis to collect from you. If you dispute the debt, it should be able to show the loan documents, proof of disbursement, and authority to collect.

Can I be jailed for not paying a loan in the Philippines?

Generally, no. Nonpayment of a civil debt is not, by itself, a crime. But fraud, falsification, identity theft, threats, or other criminal acts connected to a loan may be investigated separately.

What if the collector says they will go to my barangay?

Barangay conciliation may apply to certain disputes between individuals in the same city or municipality, but many corporate collection matters do not become valid simply because someone mentions the barangay. If invited by the barangay, attend calmly and state that you dispute the debt and request proof. Do not sign any settlement admitting liability unless the obligation is truly yours.

What if they file a small claims case against me?

Read the summons, file the required response within the deadline, attach your evidence, and attend the hearing. Small claims cases are handled by first-level courts and may cover loan claims up to ₱1,000,000. Your defense should be direct: you did not take, authorize, receive, or benefit from the loan, and the claimant has not proven otherwise.

Should I file a police report?

File a police blotter or cybercrime complaint if your identity, ID, SIM, e-wallet, bank account, photos, or personal data may have been used without permission, or if you receive threats. For online fraud or harassment, the PNP Anti-Cybercrime Group or NBI Cybercrime Division may be appropriate.

Where do I report online lending harassment?

For lending or financing companies, report unfair collection to the SEC. For misuse of personal data, report to the National Privacy Commission. For threats, identity theft, cyber harassment, or fraud, report to the PNP Anti-Cybercrime Group or NBI Cybercrime Division.

Can they contact my family, friends, or employer?

Collectors should not harass third parties or disclose your alleged debt to people who are not legally involved. If they contact your employer, relatives, or friends to shame or pressure you, save evidence and consider complaints with the SEC and NPC.

How do I remove a fake loan from my credit record?

Get your credit report through authorized CIC channels and file a dispute using the CIC Online Dispute Resolution System. Attach your dispute letter, evidence, police blotter if any, and proof that you did not receive the loan proceeds.

Is it better to pay a small amount just to stop the harassment?

Usually not if the debt is not yours. Payment may be treated as acknowledgment or may encourage further collection. A written dispute, regulatory complaint, and credit report dispute are safer ways to protect your record.

Key Takeaways

  • A collection letter is only a demand, not proof that you owe money.
  • If you never took the loan, dispute it clearly and in writing.
  • Do not admit liability or make “settlement” payments without validation.
  • Ask for the loan agreement, proof of identity verification, proof of disbursement, statement of account, and authority to collect.
  • Report lending and financing company harassment to the SEC.
  • Report misuse of personal data to the National Privacy Commission.
  • Report identity theft, threats, and online fraud to the PNP Anti-Cybercrime Group or NBI Cybercrime Division.
  • Check and dispute false credit report entries through the Credit Information Corporation.
  • If you receive an actual court summons, respond and attend the hearing. Ignoring a case can hurt you even when the loan is not yours.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.