Quick answer: Report a payday loan scam to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) at consumerfinance.gov/complaint and the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. If a fake debt collector is threatening you over a payday loan you don’t owe, also file with the FTC and your state attorney general — fake debt collection is illegal under the FDCPA. Contact your bank immediately if your account was debited without authorization.
Payday loan scams take two main forms: predatory lenders who illegally charge fees beyond state caps or collect on loans you never took out, and fake debt collectors who call threatening arrest over phantom payday loan “debts.” Both are federal violations. The CFPB supervises payday lenders directly and can take enforcement action — your complaint carries real weight.
Types of Payday Loan Scams
Advance-fee loan scams promise a loan but demand an upfront “insurance” or “processing” fee first — legitimate lenders never do this. Fake debt collectors call claiming you owe on a payday loan (sometimes one you actually did take out years ago, sometimes entirely fabricated) and threaten arrest, lawsuits, or employer notification unless you pay immediately. Predatory lenders operate without a state license, charge rates exceeding your state’s legal cap, or automatically roll over loans and debit your account without authorization. Identity theft-based loans — where someone takes out a payday loan in your name — require both a report and fraud alerts on your credit.
Where to Report a Payday Loan Scam
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Get Your Free Checklist →| Situation | Agency | Contact |
|---|---|---|
| Predatory lender / unauthorized debits | CFPB | consumerfinance.gov/complaint |
| General fraud / advance-fee scam | FTC | ReportFraud.ftc.gov |
| Fake debt collector threatening you | FTC + CFPB | ReportFraud.ftc.gov | consumerfinance.gov/complaint |
| Unlicensed lender / state law violations | State Attorney General | Search “[your state] payday loan complaint” |
| Online fraud / wire transfer | FBI IC3 | IC3.gov |
| Identity theft (loan in your name) | FTC IdentityTheft.gov | IdentityTheft.gov |
How to Report a Payday Loan Scam Step by Step
- Stop all payments immediately. Do not send money, gift cards, or wire transfers to any debt collector claiming you owe a payday loan — especially if they’re threatening arrest. Legitimate collectors cannot have you arrested for debt.
- Contact your bank. If a lender has been debiting your account without authorization, call your bank to dispute the charges, request a stop-payment order, and potentially change your account number to prevent further debits.
- Gather all documentation. Save loan agreements, emails, texts, call logs, bank statements showing unauthorized debits, and any written communications from collectors.
- File with the CFPB. Go to consumerfinance.gov/complaint — the CFPB directly supervises payday lenders and can require them to respond to your complaint within 15 days. This is your most powerful tool against a licensed lender.
- Report to the FTC. File at ReportFraud.ftc.gov for advance-fee scams, fake collectors, and general fraud. The FTC has brought major enforcement actions against payday loan scam operations.
- File with your state attorney general. Payday lending is regulated at the state level — many states cap interest rates or ban payday loans entirely. An unlicensed lender charging above your state’s cap is breaking state law. Your AG can investigate and seek refunds.
- Report fake debt collectors separately. Fake collectors violate the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA). File with the FTC, CFPB, and your state AG. You may be entitled to sue the collector for up to $1,000 in statutory damages plus actual damages.
- Place fraud alerts if identity theft is involved. If someone took out a loan in your name, file at IdentityTheft.gov, place a fraud alert with the three credit bureaus, and consider a credit freeze.
Know Your Rights Against Fake Collectors
No arrest for debt: Debt collectors cannot have you arrested for owing money. Threatening arrest is illegal under the FDCPA (15 U.S.C. § 1692e).
Verification required: Within 5 days of first contact, a real collector must send written notice of the debt. You can request written verification — they must stop collection until they provide it.
Demand proof: Ask the caller for the company name, address, and the name of the original creditor in writing. Scammers often hang up or become abusive.
Penalties for Payday Loan Fraud
FDCPA violations: Collectors face statutory damages up to $1,000 per lawsuit, plus actual damages and attorney’s fees — payable to you.
CFPB enforcement: The CFPB has levied hundreds of millions in penalties against predatory payday lenders and required restitution to consumers.
Criminal fraud: Advance-fee loan scams and fake debt collection operations face wire fraud charges — up to 20 years imprisonment.
Frequently Asked Questions
For related guides see: How to Report a Debt Collector, How to Report Identity Theft, How to Report an Online Scam.
Independent resource — not affiliated with any U.S. government agency. Last reviewed: June 2026.
This guide is a supporting article in our pillar resource covering all scam types, every federal agency, and all 50 state contacts.
How to Report Any Scam: Complete U.S. Guide →Rules and complaint offices vary by state. Use our state lookup to find the correct reporting agency, phone number, and complaint portal.
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