Consumer Protection Lawyers in New York
Consumer protection law is the set of federal and state statutes that police how businesses treat you: debt collectors who harass or lie (FDCPA), credit bureaus that won't fix errors (FCRA), robocalls and spam texts you never consented to (TCPA), defective vehicles that dealers won't take back (lemon laws), and deceptive charges, warranties, or sales tactics. What makes this area unusual — and worth knowing about — is that many of these statutes let consumers recover set damages plus attorney's fees, which means lawyers can often take small-dollar cases at no cost to you. The individual amounts are sometimes modest, but the statutes exist precisely so that companies can't profit from abuses too small for anyone to fight. A consumer protection lawyer knows which statute fits your situation and what documentation makes the claim stick.
Verified consumer protection lawyers licensed in New York
No verified consumer protection lawyers are listed in New York on Lawckin yet. New attorneys join regularly — browse the full directory or check back soon.
Browse all lawyersFind a consumer protection lawyer by city
When to hire a consumer protection lawyer
Get a consultation when a specific legal trigger has occurred, and bring paper. Concrete triggers: a debt collector contacts you about a debt you already disputed in writing, threatens action it can't take, or calls your workplace after you said stop; a credit bureau leaves an error on your report after you formally disputed it; a dealer sold you a vehicle that's been in the shop repeatedly for the same defect; or you're receiving automated calls or texts after asking them to end. Save everything — letters, call logs, screenshots, repair orders. Consumer cases are won on documentation, and most consumer lawyers review them free because the statutes pay their fees.
Consumer Protection Lawyer FAQ
How much does a consumer protection lawyer cost?
Often nothing out of pocket. The main consumer statutes — FDCPA, FCRA, TCPA, and most lemon laws — require the losing company to pay your attorney's fees on a successful claim, so many consumer lawyers work on that basis or on contingency. If a lawyer asks for a large retainer for a standard debt-harassment or credit-report case, it's reasonable to get a second opinion.
A debt collector is harassing me. What are my rights?
Collectors can't call before 8am or after 9pm, contact you at work after you've said not to, discuss your debt with others, threaten actions they can't legally take, or continue collecting a disputed debt without validating it. You can demand in writing that they stop contacting you entirely. Keep a log of every call and letter — each violation can carry statutory damages, and patterns strengthen the case.
The credit bureau won't fix an error on my report. Now what?
The legal claim usually arises after a failed dispute: you disputed the error in writing with the bureau, they 'verified' it anyway, and the error is costing you — a denied loan, higher rate, or lost job offer. At that point the FCRA lets you sue the bureau and sometimes the furnisher. Dispute by mail with documents attached, keep copies, and see a lawyer if the error survives the dispute.
Is my claim too small to bother with?
Probably not, and that's the point of these laws. Statutory damages plus fee-shifting make small claims viable — a single wrongful collection letter or a handful of illegal robocalls can support a real case. Where many similar consumers are affected, class actions aggregate the harm. Small-claims court is also an option for simple disputes, but talk to a consumer lawyer first; the statutory route is often stronger.