No. Filing a TCPA claim is your legal right and will not impact your credit score or any legitimate business relationships.
Yes. If many people experienced similar violations from the same company, a class action lawsuit may be appropriate and can increase overall recovery amounts.
Consent can be revoked at any time. Once you ask a company to stop contacting you, they must honor that request within 30 days.
Not necessarily. Attorneys can use legal tools to trace calls back to their source, even if the caller ID was spoofed or blocked.
You generally have four years from the date of violation to file a TCPA lawsuit. However, evidence collection takes time, so it's best to act quickly.
Yes — the FCC and FTC have active programs to block and pursue enforcement against illegal robocalls and text campaigns. Recent rule changes and enforcement notices have increased blocking authority and enforcement activity.
Recoveries vary by case: TCPA statutory damages and settlements range widely depending on number of violations, willfulness, and whether the case is individual or class-wide. Large settlements and multi-million penalties have been secured in recent years.
Yes — numbers on the Registry generate strong statutory claims when telemarketers call or text in violation; the FTC and courts treat Registry violations seriously.
No. If your attorney takes the case, fees are typically contingency-based — you pay only if there’s a recovery.

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