FDCPA

Why FDCPA Attorney’s Fees Often Exceed the Damages (And Why That’s the Point)

When consumers learn that attorney’s fees in Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) cases often exceed the actual damages recovered, the reaction is usually confusion.

“How can a lawyer recover more in fees than the client gets?”

The answer is simple—and intentional.

👉 That’s exactly how the law is designed to work.


Understanding the FDCPA

The FDCPA is a federal law that protects consumers from abusive, deceptive, and unfair debt collection practices.

It allows consumers to recover:

  • Actual damages (if any)
  • Statutory damages up to $1,000
  • Attorney’s fees and costs

Why Damages Are Often Small

Unlike personal injury cases, FDCPA claims usually involve:

  • Harassing phone calls
  • False statements
  • Improper debt collection tactics

These violations don’t always cause large financial losses.

So Congress capped statutory damages at:

👉 $1,000 per case


So Why Are Attorney’s Fees Higher?

Because litigation takes work.

Even a “simple” FDCPA case can involve:

  • Reviewing call logs and letters
  • Drafting complaints
  • Filing motions
  • Negotiating settlements
  • Court appearances

All of that takes time—and time equals fees.


The Purpose of Fee Shifting

FDCPA includes a fee-shifting provision, which means:

👉 The debt collector—not the consumer—pays the attorney’s fees if the consumer wins.


Why Congress Designed It This Way

Without fee shifting:

  • No lawyer would take small-damage cases
  • Consumers would have no practical way to enforce the law
  • Debt collectors could violate the law without consequence

Fee shifting ensures:

✔ Consumers can bring claims
✔ Attorneys can afford to take cases
✔ Debt collectors are held accountable


Real-World Example

A case may involve:

  • $1,000 statutory damages
  • $7,500 in attorney’s fees

This is normal—and legally justified.


Courts Support This Structure

Courts consistently recognize that:

👉 Attorney’s fees may exceed damages in FDCPA cases

Because the purpose is:

  • Enforcement
  • Deterrence
  • Consumer protection

Why This Benefits Consumers

This system allows:

  • Everyday consumers to fight back
  • Legal representation without upfront cost
  • Fair enforcement of federal law

Final Takeaway

FDCPA attorney’s fees exceeding damages isn’t a loophole—

👉 It’s the system working as intended.

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