Title 31 › Subtitle SUBTITLE III— - FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT › Chapter CHAPTER 37— - CLAIMS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - CLAIMS OF THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT › § 3711
Agency leaders must try to collect any money or property the federal government is owed. They may settle (compromise) a claim for up to $100,000 (not counting interest), or a higher amount if the Attorney General allows it. They can stop or suspend collection if the person cannot pay a meaningful part of the claim or if collecting would cost more than what would be recovered. They may not settle claims that look fraudulent, false, or are tied to antitrust violations. The Transportation Secretary may not settle certain penalties for less than $500. When a settlement is made, it is final unless it was obtained by fraud, misrepresentation, a false claim, or a mutual factual mistake. Agency heads must follow their own rules and any standards set by the Attorney General and the Secretary of the Treasury. They may obtain consumer credit reports or similar credit information on people who owe money. When an agency plans to tell a credit reporting company that someone is responsible for a debt (not a tax), the agency must first review the claim, decide it is valid and overdue, and give the person written notice that includes the amount, the planned disclosure, and the person’s rights. The notice must give at least 60 days before disclosure. The person must not have signed a written repayment plan or asked for a review. Agencies must be able to update or correct information, verify it when asked, and limit disclosures to identity details, the amount/status/history of the debt, and the agency or program involved. If a non-tax debt is delinquent 180 days, the agency must transfer it to the Secretary of the Treasury unless the debt is in litigation, part of a planned asset sale within 1 year (or later if approved), already with a private collector or debt center for a period set by the Treasury, or will be collected by internal offset within 3 years. The Treasury can assign debts to debt collection centers, private contractors, or the Department of Justice. Agencies operating collection centers may charge fees to cover costs and keep those fees from the collections, holding them in an Account whose unobligated balance at the close of business on September 30 is deposited into the Treasury by January 1 each year, minus any amount needed to cover costs. Before writing off a delinquent debt, agencies must try options like administrative or tax refund offset, salary offset, referral to contractors or debt centers, credit reporting, wage garnishment, litigation, or foreclosure. Agencies may also sell non-tax debts more than 90 days delinquent through competitive sales for cash (or cash plus a residual share), without recourse, and transfer the government’s rights to the buyer. Within one year after the date of enactment of the Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996, agencies with collateralized non-tax debts had to report valuations of those portfolios as required.
Full Legal Text
Money and Finance — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
31 U.S.C. § 3711
Title 31 — Money and Finance
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73