AR Glossary

What is Third-Party Debt Collection?

Third-party collection is when a business hires an external agency or attorney to collect debts on their behalf — separate from the original creditor.

Third-Party Collection Explained

Third-party debt collection is when an external entity — a collection agency, attorney firm, or debt buyer — contacts a debtor to collect money owed to a different, original creditor. The "third party" refers to the collector: they are legally distinct from both the creditor (who is owed the money) and the debtor (who owes it).

When a B2B company hands its past-due invoices to a collection agency, that becomes third-party collection. The debtor now receives calls and letters from the agency — not from the original creditor. This shift carries legal implications: third-party collectors are subject to additional regulations, and the debtor-creditor relationship changes in tone and urgency.

Third-party collection is typically used as an escalation after first-party efforts (internal AR or AI-assisted outreach under the creditor's own brand) have been exhausted. The trade-off is clear: you gain leverage and legal escalation options, but pay 25–35% of whatever is recovered and risk damaging the ongoing customer relationship.

What You Need to Know About Third-Party Collection

Types of Third-Party Collectors

Collection Agency
Most common
Licensed agencies that collect on behalf of creditors for a contingency fee. Phone, mail, and email outreach.
Attorney Firm
Highest leverage
Formal demand letters on legal letterhead. Signals real litigation risk. Higher recovery on stubborn accounts.
Debt Buyer
Immediate liquidity
Purchases debt outright at 5–20 cents on the dollar. You get cash now; they collect for their own account.
Process Server
Last resort
Used when litigation has begun. Serves legal documents. Not a collection tool — a legal enforcement tool.

Third-Party Collection in Practice: B2B Example

Scenario: $75K Overdue Invoice, 90 Days Non-Responsive

Situation: A software vendor is owed $75,000 by a client who has stopped responding after 90 days of first-party outreach — calls, emails, and payment plan offers all ignored.

Third-party escalation: The vendor assigns the account to a commercial collection attorney. The attorney sends a formal demand letter on firm letterhead with a bar number, stating that failure to respond within 15 days will result in litigation filing.

Outcome: The debtor responds within 7 days with a payment plan. The attorney collects $68,000 over 4 months. Attorney fee: 35% = $23,800. Vendor receives: $44,200.

Alternative: Without third-party escalation, this account would likely have been written off entirely. The $44,200 net recovery — despite the 35% fee — was far better than zero. Third-party is the right call when first-party has genuinely failed.

AgentCollect: Attorney-Backed Escalation, Built In

Licensed Attorney Demand Letters — No Law Firm to Manage

When first-party AI collection efforts have been exhausted, AgentCollect can escalate to attorney-backed demand letters — formal notices from a licensed attorney with a real bar number and law firm address. This is the same legal weight as hiring a collection law firm, without the relationship management overhead.

Unlike traditional third-party agencies, AgentCollect's escalation path is built into the same platform — you do not have to sign a new contract, transfer account files, or re-explain the debt. The AI handles the handoff from first-party outreach to attorney demand automatically, at the right escalation threshold.

The result: most accounts never reach attorney escalation (because first-party AI collects them earlier), and the ones that do get attorney-level legal weight without giving up 35% of a recovery you could have handled for less.

Related AR Glossary Terms

Third-Party Collection FAQ

When does third-party collection make sense for B2B?
Third-party collection makes sense when: first-party efforts have failed after 60–90 days; the debtor is unresponsive or has changed contact information; the balance is large enough to justify a 25–35% contingency fee; or the situation requires legal escalation with formal demand letters from a licensed attorney. For smaller balances or younger debts, first-party collection almost always yields better net recoveries.
What is the difference between third-party collection and debt buying?
In third-party collection, the agency collects on your behalf and earns a contingency fee — you still own the debt. In debt buying, the buyer purchases the debt from you at a steep discount (often 5–20 cents on the dollar) and then collects for their own account. Debt buying gives you immediate (though small) liquidity. Third-party collection typically yields more total dollars if the debt is still collectible.
Does the FDCPA apply to B2B third-party collection?
The FDCPA technically applies to consumer debts, not commercial B2B debts. However, many states have their own commercial collection laws, and most reputable B2B collection agencies follow FDCPA-style practices anyway — because aggressive tactics harm their reputation and reduce collection rates. Always verify the compliance posture of any agency you hire, regardless of the B2B vs. consumer distinction.
How is attorney collection different from collection agency collection?
Attorney collection involves a formal demand letter on legal letterhead with a bar number and law firm address — this carries significantly more legal weight than a standard agency letter. Debtors are more likely to respond to an attorney demand because it signals imminent litigation. Attorney fees are often higher (30–40%), but recovery rates on larger or older balances can justify the cost. AgentCollect partners with licensed attorneys for demand letters, giving clients attorney-backed escalation without managing a law firm directly.

Exhaust first-party before paying 35% to a third party.

AgentCollect AI recovers 60–75% of collectible debt first-party — then escalates to attorney demand letters automatically for the rest.

Start a free pilot →