
Statute of Limitations on Debt Collection in Montana
The statute of limitations on debt in Montana is eight years for most debts, including credit cards, medical, student loans, auto loans, and mortgages.
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The statute of limitations on debt in Montana is eight years for most debts, including credit cards, medical, student loans, auto loans, and mortgages.
The statute of limitations on debt in Florida is five years for these types of debt: credit card, medical, auto loan, student loan, mortgage, and personal loan.

The Virginia statute of limitations on debt is five years for written contracts and credit cards and three years for open accounts and oral contracts.

The statute of limitations for most debts in Utah is six years, starting from the time of the last payment on the debt.

Tennessee's statute of limitations on debt is 6 years on written contracts; once it expires, collectors can't sue, but the debt remains.

South Carolina’s statute of limitations is 3 years for debts related to credit cards, medical bills, and contracts; after that, lawsuits are time-barred.

Arizona's statute of limitations on debt is 6 years on written contracts, 3 on oral. Once it expires, collectors can't sue, but the debt remains.

The statute of limitations on debt in North Dakota is six years, meaning debt collectors only have six years to sue you for an unpaid debt.

In Wisconsin, the statute of limitations on credit card debt, oral and written contracts, and open accounts is six years.

In New Jersey, the statute of limitations on mortgage debt, medical debt, credit card debt, and state tax debt is six years.

Nebraska's statute of limitations on debt is 5 years on written contracts, 4 on oral. Once it expires, collectors can't sue, but the debt remains.
North Carolina's statute of limitations on debt is 3 years for most consumer debts; once it expires, collectors can't sue, but the debt remains.