The debt settlement industry in 2026 includes both legitimate, accredited organizations that produce real results for clients — and scam operations that collect fees without delivering on promises. The FTC actively pursues fraudulent debt relief operations, taking enforcement action against multiple companies in 2025 and 2026 alone. Knowing exactly what distinguishes a legitimate provider from a scam is the most important due diligence you can do before sharing any financial information or enrolling in any program.
The Non-Negotiable Standards for Any Legitimate Debt Settlement Company
Zero upfront fees — this is federal law, not a preference
The FTC’s Telemarketing Sales Rule explicitly prohibits debt settlement companies from collecting any fee before a debt is actually settled and you authorize the payment. Any company charging a monthly enrollment fee, a setup fee, an upfront processing fee, or any charge before your first settlement is completed is violating federal law. This is the single clearest indicator of a scam. United Debt Relief’s network partners charge fees only after a settlement is successfully completed and you authorize it — period.
BBB accreditation and verifiable track record
Check the company’s rating at bbb.org. Look at how long they have been in business, the volume of resolved complaints, and the nature of any unresolved complaints. A pattern of fee-related complaints is a serious red flag. United Debt Relief operates through a BBB-accredited network of providers with verifiable histories.
State licensing compliance
Most states require debt settlement companies to be licensed to operate. Verify that any company you consider is properly licensed in your state through your state attorney general’s office. Unlicensed debt settlement operations are illegal in most states.
Full written disclosure before enrollment
Before you sign anything, a legitimate provider must give you: a complete written agreement specifying all fees, the program timeline, how your dedicated savings account works, your right to cancel, and a realistic explanation of how the program may affect your credit. If a company pushes you to commit without providing written documentation, walk away.
Questions to Ask Before Enrolling
- “Do you charge any fees before a settlement is completed?” — The answer must be no.
- “Is my savings account in my name and under my control?” — The answer must be yes.
- “Can I cancel if I change my mind?” — The answer must be yes, with specifics on how.
- “Are you licensed in my state?” — Verify the answer independently through your state AG.
- “What is the estimated timeline and typical savings for someone with my debt profile?” — Legitimate providers give honest estimates; scammers make guarantees they cannot keep.
What Makes United Debt Relief a Legitimate Choice
United Debt Relief is a debt relief broker and referral service connecting clients with in-network certified debt negotiators, attorneys, and financial professionals across all 50 states. Our standards: no upfront fees — ever; BBB-accredited network of providers; dedicated savings account in your name; full written disclosure before enrollment; free consultation with no enrollment pressure; five programs to match the right solution to your specific situation. Clients who complete our done-for-you Debt Settlement program save an average of 40 to 50% on enrolled debt before fees.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the difference between a debt settlement company and a debt relief broker?
A debt settlement company negotiates directly with creditors. A debt relief broker — like United Debt Relief — connects clients with a network of specialized providers including settlement negotiators, law firms, lending partners, and tax professionals. The broker model allows matching clients to the most appropriate provider for their specific situation across multiple program types.
Q: How much does legitimate debt settlement cost?
Industry-standard fees for debt settlement range from 15 to 25% of enrolled debt, collected only after each settlement is completed. United Debt Relief’s network partners disclose all fees in full before enrollment. The net savings after fees — typically 20 to 35% of enrolled debt — represents real financial benefit for clients who complete the program.
Q: Can I check if a company is on the FTC’s scam list?
The FTC publishes enforcement actions at ftc.gov/enforcement. You can also search company names at the CFPB complaint database at consumerfinance.gov/complaint. Both resources are free and provide documented enforcement history.
Work with a legitimate, accredited organization. Call United Debt Relief at 1 (888) 802-2092. No upfront fees — ever. BBB-accredited network. Free consultation. All 50 states.