Who Hunter Warfield is — the verifiable facts
- Legal name: Hunter Warfield, Inc.
- What they are: A third-party collection agency — in most placements the original creditor still owns the account.
- What they collect: Apartment and rental-housing debt above all — unpaid rent, broken-lease and early-termination charges, move-out damage claims, and student-housing balances collected for landlords and property management companies — plus funeral-care, commercial, and utility receivables.
- Headquarters: Tampa, Florida (4620 Woodland Corporate Blvd, Tampa, FL 33614)
- Mailing address for written disputes: 4620 Woodland Corporate Blvd, Tampa, FL 33614
Company details and addresses are as reflected in public records as of June 2026 and can change; when you mail anything, mirror the address printed on the notice you actually received — that address controls for your account.
Operating as Hunter Warfield since 2005 (it traces to the split of Pierce Hamilton & Stern, a Maryland collection firm), Hunter Warfield is a Tampa-based third-party agency specializing in the multifamily housing industry. It does not purchase the debt — the property manager or landlord that placed the account still owns it — and its own disclosures page lists the records you can demand, including the contract evidencing the debt and the chain of any assignment.
As a third-party agency, Hunter Warfield is typically collecting on behalf of the creditor named in the letter — the creditor usually still owns the account. That matters two ways: the account can be pulled back or moved to another agency at any time, and any negotiated resolution should be confirmed in writing as binding on the creditor, not just the agency. A validation demand forces the file to be documented and identifies the current owner on the record.
Your rights in the first 30 days
Federal law front-loads your leverage. Under 15 U.S.C. § 1692g, if you dispute the debt in writing within 30 days of receiving the validation notice, Hunter Warfield must cease collection until verification is mailed to you. Under 12 C.F.R. § 1006.26 (Regulation F), no collector may sue or even threaten to sue on a time-barred debt — a strict-liability rule. And under 15 U.S.C. § 1692e, misrepresenting the legal status or amount of a debt is itself a federal violation. None of these rights depends on whether you owe the money.
How to respond — the right first move
One certified letter does all the work: it disputes the debt in writing (preserving the § 1692g pause), demands the itemized history, the signed agreement, and proof of authority to collect, and states plainly that nothing in it acknowledges the debt or waives any defense. Send it certified mail, return receipt requested, keep the green card, and say nothing of substance on the phone until the response arrives. The preview below shows how it opens.
Check the dates before anything else
A Hunter Warfield balance is usually a move-out statement wearing a collection letter — and move-out charges are governed by your state's security deposit statute, with itemization duties and deadlines the landlord may already have missed. Before paying anything, check your state's rules in our security deposit deadlines guide: a landlord who blew the statutory window may owe YOU money, and that changes the entire conversation.
Every state caps how long a collector has to sue — and in most states a payment or signed acknowledgment can restart that clock. Before any payment on an older account, run the dates against your state’s rules: see our debt statute of limitations by state guide and the security deposit deadlines by state guide.
If they sue
Respond — always. Most collection suits end in default judgments because the consumer never answers, and a default converts a contestable claim into a garnishable one. Answering puts ownership documentation, itemization, and any limitations defense squarely in play, and your dated validation letter becomes Exhibit A: proof you demanded the paperwork before they filed. For the validation mechanics in depth, see our debt validation letter guide and the assignment-documentation playbook.
Run your deadline, see the letter
The preview locks here. The complete letter is addressed to Hunter Warfield with your facts, sequences the § 1692g demands correctly, and asserts your rights without one word that acknowledges the debt or restarts a limitations clock — in 60 seconds.
My Letter to Hunter Warfield — $9Need more? Bundle of 3 — $19 · Family Pack — $39