Account Services Phone Harassment – Your Rights & How to Defend Them
If Account Services is calling you repeatedly about debts—and their calls are threatening, happen at odd hours, or you’ve asked them to stop and they haven’t—you may be facing illegal debt collection harassment. Laws are in place to protect you from abusive practices, and knowing your rights can help you stop the harassment and regain control.
Who Is Account Services?
Account Services is a third-party collection agency that contacts people about unpaid debts for creditors. They may call your home, leave voicemails, send letters or messages. While collecting legitimate debt is permissible under federal and state laws, too many calls, vague debt claims, or refusal to validate what is owed can cross the line into harassment.
What Harassing Practices May Be Illegal
Under laws like the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), certain behaviors are forbidden. If you’re experiencing any of the following from Account Services, they may be violating legal protections:
Repeated or Excessive Phone Calls
Getting many calls per day, or calls if you’ve clearly asked them to stop, especially using different numbers to avoid blocking.
Using Threats or Misleading Language
Saying that you’ll be arrested, wage garnished, or that legal action is imminent when it isn’t; exaggerating what they can do.
Calling at Inappropriate Times or Places
Calls very early in the morning or late at night, or calling at your workplace when you’ve asked them not to.
Ignoring Consumer’s Requests to Validate Debt or Cease Contact
You have the right to request proof of the debt. You also have the right to send a written cease-and-desist notice. If Account Services continues to contact you aggressively after receiving such requests, they may be violating the law.
If you identify with these issues, you are likely dealing with Account Services phone harassment.
Steps You Can Take to Protect Yourself
-
Keep detailed records — Every call, message, letter: date, time, number, what was said, and whether you asked them to stop.
-
Request written debt validation — Formally demand proof: amount owed, creditor, documentation.
-
Send a cease-and-desist letter — Let them know in writing you want them to stop contacting you. Once they receive it, their communication options get limited.
-
Report & Seek Legal Help — If harassment continues, you may file complaints with the FTC, CFPB, or your state Attorney General. A consumer protection attorney can help enforce your rights and potentially recover damages.
For more information on how to deal with this, check out this guide on Account Services phone harassment.

