§ 8.01-465.26.(Effective July 1, 2027) Definitions.
Chapter 17.4. Uniform Consumer Debt Default Judgments Act · Last amended 2026 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-465.26
Plain-English Summary
Chapter 17.4 takes effect July 1, 2027, and this section supplies the vocabulary the rest of the chapter builds on. At the center is “consumer debt” — an obligation or alleged obligation of an individual to pay money arising from a transaction where the money, property, insurance, or service involved was primarily for a personal, family, or household purpose. The individual on the hook for that debt is the “consumer.”
Several terms track the debt's history over time. “Charge off” describes a creditor removing the debt as an asset from its own books; “default” describes a failure to satisfy the debt that gives rise to a covered action; and “outstanding balance” is the amount owed at charge off or default, or after disposing of property that secured the debt. “Creditor” is defined by reference to that same timeline — the person to whom the debt was owed at charge off, or at default if it was never charged off — and the definition reaches a debt buyer that picked up the charged-off debt only incidentally, as part of acquiring a larger portfolio that was predominantly not charged off, as long as that buyer was the person owed the debt at the relevant moment.
The remaining terms round out the chapter's mechanics: “finance charge” borrows its meaning from the federal Truth in Lending Act, “secured consumer debt” and “unsecured consumer debt” split debts by whether property backs them, and “record” and “sign” accommodate electronic documents and signatures alongside paper ones.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is “consumer debt” under this chapter?
An obligation or alleged obligation of an individual to pay money that arises out of a transaction where the money, property, insurance, or service involved was primarily for a personal, family, or household purpose.
Who counts as a “creditor” under this chapter?
The person to whom the consumer debt was owed at the time of charge off, or at the time of default if it was never charged off, including a debt buyer that acquired the charged-off debt as an incidental part of acquiring a larger portfolio that was predominantly not charged off, provided the buyer was the person owed the debt at charge off or default.
What does “charge off” mean?
A creditor's removal of a consumer debt as an asset from the creditor's financial records.
How does this chapter define “default”?
Except as used in the term “default judgment,” a failure to satisfy a consumer debt that gives rise to an action to which this chapter applies.
What is the difference between “secured consumer debt” and “unsecured consumer debt”?
Secured consumer debt is secured by real or personal property, while unsecured consumer debt is not.
Amendment History
2026, c. 395.