
Robocalls Still America’s Top Consumer Complaint
March 28, 2026Debt Relief Robocall Scam Alert
If a robocall promised to erase your credit card debt in a few easy steps, would you believe it?
Scammers are betting that plenty of people will. With consumer debt still weighing heavily on households, debt relief robocalls are flooding phones with promises that sound almost too good to ignore. In Nomorobo’s source material for this video, the pitch claims banks and credit card companies violated federal law, and that consumers now qualify for a special program to eliminate what they owe.
There’s just one problem: the story falls apart fast.
Watch and Learn
In our latest Fraud Fighters video, we break down a real robocall that claims you may be entitled to debt elimination because of illegal credit reporting practices and predatory lending. The caller even references a supposed “Consumer Shield Act” and says you can access a 0% interest loan that will eventually be dismissed. According to the attached Nomorobo script, investigators could find no such program.
How the Debt Elimination Scam Works
The scam starts with an official-sounding robocall.
The caller says recent investigations uncovered wrongdoing by major banks and credit card companies. Then comes the hook: because of those violations, your debt may be eligible for elimination. In the version captured by Nomorobo, listeners are told to press 5 to learn how to become a recipient of a so-called CCSA loan.
That’s where the pitch gets especially shaky.
Nomorobo investigators found that responding to the robocall from “DFS” led to a variety of different debt relief companies around the country. When they asked what laws had actually been broken, they got different answers from different callers. One suggested lenders failed to verify income. Another claimed information was being shared with third parties. Another insisted people with good payment histories should not be paying more than 3.9% interest.
In other words, the callers could not keep their own story straight.
That inconsistency is a giant red flag. Real consumer protection programs do not depend on vague, shifting explanations from random companies reached through a robocall.
Why This Scam Is Dangerous
This scam is dangerous because it targets people who may already be stressed about debt.
The attached Nomorobo material says the robocalls appear designed to gain credibility by citing federal laws, then push borrowers into sharing personal information or paying exorbitant fees for questionable help negotiating with creditors.
That means the real risk is not debt relief. It is identity theft, financial fraud, and losing money to companies that promised a miracle but delivered nothing useful.
And let’s be honest: when a stranger on the phone says they can make your debt disappear because of a secret legal loophole, that is not financial planning. That is theater.

Red Flags to Watch For
Be skeptical if a caller:
- Promises to eliminate or erase your debt completely
- Uses legal jargon to sound credible but cannot explain it clearly
- Claims you qualify for a special government or consumer program you have never heard of
- Pressures you to act immediately by pressing a number or speaking to an “agent”
- Asks for personal, banking, or credit card information
- Routes you to different companies with different explanations
How to Protect Yourself From Debt Relief Scams
Hang up right away. Do not engage with the robocall, and do not press any buttons.
Never share personal information. That includes your Social Security number, bank account details, or credit card information with an unsolicited caller.
Check your credit and debt situation yourself. If you are worried about your credit report, go directly to AnnualCreditReport.com rather than relying on claims from a robocaller.
Report suspicious calls. The FTC’s fraud reporting site is the right place to flag scam activity.
If you truly need debt help, work with a legitimate nonprofit credit counseling organization. The Nomorobo script points readers to the National Foundation for Credit Counseling as a safer place to start.
Fraud Fighter Pro Tip
A real debt solution starts with a real review of your finances, not a robocall and a made-up law.
If someone claims your debt can be wiped out because banks violated federal rules, slow down and verify everything independently. Scammers love legal-sounding language because it makes false promises sound official.
Prevent Spam and Scam Texts With Nomorobo
Debt relief scams are just one more example of how fraudsters use pressure, confusion, and hope to get what they want.
Nomorobo helps stop robocalls, scam calls, and spam texts before they reach you. That means fewer interruptions, fewer risky calls, and a better chance of avoiding the next “too good to be true” pitch.
Your debt may be real. The robocall solution probably isn’t.
Sign up today to protect yourself from debt relief scams and thousands of other robocall and text fraud attempts.




