Sued for Debt in Illinois? You Have 30 Days

Illinois

Sued for Debt in Illinois? Here’s Exactly What You Have — and What You Do Not Have Time to Waste.

A summons arrived. Maybe it was left at your door. Maybe it showed up at your job. It names a creditor or a company you may not recognize — and it is demanding money you may not have.

In Illinois, you have 30 days from the date of service to file a written response. Miss that window and the court enters a default judgment against you. That judgment lets the creditor garnish your wages, levy your bank, and place liens on property — all through court orders your employer and bank must follow.

Illinois law gives defendants real tools to fight back. Cannon Legal PLLC challenges standing, documentation, and the statute of limitations in every case. Many Illinois debt lawsuits are vulnerable to dismissal. We can evaluate yours for free.

What That Summons Actually Says — And What You Need to Do Right Now

The return date on your Illinois summons is the deadline. You must file a written appearance — and usually an answer — before that date. In small claims court (disputes of $10,000 or less), the process is slightly different, but showing up prepared matters just as much.

The entity suing you may not be your original creditor. It may be a debt buyer — a company that paid cents on the dollar for a portfolio of charged-off accounts and is now suing you for the full claimed balance. That distinction changes your defense entirely.

Illinois is one of the strictest states in the country for debt buyer lawsuits. Supreme Court Rule 280.2 requires them to attach a sworn Debt Collection Affidavit to every complaint — documenting the original creditor, the charge-off balance, and every assignment in the chain of ownership. A defective affidavit is grounds for dismissal.

Do not ignore this lawsuit. Illinois courts enter default judgments for unanswered summons. Once entered, the creditor can garnish your wages and levy your bank without additional notice.

Illinois Gives Defendants More Defenses Than Most States

Illinois courts have definitively classified credit card debt as an unwritten contract — which means it falls under the 5-year statute of limitations in 735 ILCS 5/13-205, not the 10-year written contract limit. Debt buyers routinely try to sue on accounts that are already time-barred.

Beyond the SOL, Illinois’s strict Rule 280.2 documentation standard gives defendants meaningful leverage. Debt buyers operating through high-volume collection law firms often file with incomplete affidavits. When the documentation does not meet Illinois’s standard, dismissal is the right motion.

  • Statute of limitations — 5 years for credit card and open account debt under 735 ILCS 5/13-205; assert this as an absolute defense against stale accounts
  • Chain of title attack (Rule 280.2) — demand the complete Debt Collection Affidavit; missing assignments are grounds for dismissal
  • Unlicensed collection — debt buyers and collection agencies must hold an active IDFPR license; no license means no right to sue
  • FDCPA and ICAA violations — abusive or deceptive collection conduct triggers counterclaims under the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act
  • Compel arbitration — if the original contract contained an arbitration clause, force the case out of court; creditors often abandon claims rather than pay arbitration fees
  • Identity theft defense (Rule 280.5) — if the account was opened fraudulently, file the Supreme Court Affidavit and shift the burden to the plaintiff
5 yrs

Illinois’s statute of limitations for credit card and open account debt — classified as unwritten contracts under Portfolio Acquisitions v. Feltman

If You Missed the Deadline — A Default Judgment Is Not Necessarily the End

Illinois courts apply a generous standard for vacating default judgments. Under 735 ILCS 5/2-1301, you have 30 days after entry to file a motion — and courts frequently grant relief to allow the case to be decided on its merits. After 30 days and up to 2 years, a Section 2-1401 petition is available if you can show a meritorious defense and due diligence.

A judgment obtained through improper service is void — not just voidable. If you were never properly served, that judgment can be challenged at any time, with no deadline. Improper service is more common than you might expect in high-volume collection litigation.

Even if the judgment stands, post-judgment options remain: exemption claims to protect your income, lump-sum negotiated settlements, and bankruptcy’s automatic stay — which halts all collection the moment you file.

How Cannon Legal PLLC Fights Illinois Debt Lawsuits

We start by pulling the complaint, the affidavit, and the underlying account documentation. We calculate when the debt defaulted. We check whether the plaintiff is licensed. We evaluate whether Rule 280.2 was satisfied. In a significant percentage of Illinois collection cases, at least one of those lines produces a viable defense.

When dismissal is the strongest path, we move for it. When settlement produces a better result, we negotiate from the documentation weaknesses we identified. We know what Illinois debt buyers paid for these portfolios — and we use that economic reality to reach resolutions that protect our clients.