Does The CBE Group Pay for Delete? What You Need to Know

by Joe Mahlow • Updated on Mar. 18, 2026
The CBE Group pay for delete is an option many consumers explore when trying to remove collections from their credit report. While not all collection agencies openly offer pay for delete agreements, some individuals attempt to negotiate with The CBE Group to have the account removed in exchange for payment.
The CBE Group may report a collection account after a debt has been assigned or sold to them, which can lower your credit score and affect your ability to get approved for loans or credit cards. Understanding how pay for delete works, whether the CBE Group is likely to agree, and what alternative strategies are available can help you make a more informed decision and take control of your credit situation.
The CBE Group · Pay for Delete · Credit Report · Collections
If The CBE Group is on your credit report, paying them is only step one. The real question is whether you can get the account deleted entirely. Here is what the data actually shows.
Updated March 2026 · 7 min read · Sources: BBB Complaint Database, CFPB, myFICO
Does The CBE Group do pay for delete? Yes, in documented cases. BBB complaint records from January 2026 include CBE Group's own written response stating: "we submitted a request for deletion of our credit reporting trade line to the three major credit reporting bureaus (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion)." The CBE Group does not have a public pay-for-delete policy, but they have processed deletions after formal escalations, dispute resolutions, and negotiated settlements.
Most people who deal with The CBE Group think they have two choices: pay and hope the damage fades, or fight and hope the collection disappears. What many do not know is that a third outcome exists, where you pay or escalate formally and the account is fully removed from all three bureaus. That outcome is not guaranteed, but it is real and documented.
Our guide to The CBE Group covers everything about who they are and how to handle them. This article focuses on one specific question: can you get them to delete the collection, and how do you make that happen.
What is pay for delete?
Pay for delete is an agreement where a debt collector removes a collection account from your credit report in exchange for payment. Instead of the account staying on your report as "paid collection," the whole tradeline is deleted from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. This is the best possible outcome when paying a valid collection. The FCRA does not require collectors to offer it, but it does not prohibit it either.
The difference between paying a collection and getting pay-for-delete is significant. When you pay without a deletion agreement, the account stays on your report for up to 7 years from the original delinquency date. It shows as "paid," which is slightly better than "unpaid," but it still signals to lenders that the account went to collections. Under FICO 8, the most widely used scoring model, paid collections still carry meaningful negative weight.
A pay-for-delete agreement removes the account entirely. Lenders reviewing your report see nothing. Your credit score improves as if the collection never existed. That is the difference between a cosmetic fix and a real one.
Does The CBE Group actually process pay for delete?
Yes, in documented cases. BBB complaint records from 2025 and 2026 include multiple formal responses from The CBE Group confirming they submitted deletion requests to all three major credit bureaus. This happened most commonly in three situations: when the debt was disputed as fraudulent or invalid, when a BBB complaint was filed by the consumer, and in some cases when the consumer escalated through a formal written dispute process.
What CBE Group said in their own words
These are direct quotes from The CBE Group's verified BBB complaint responses. The language is significant because it shows this is a real, documented process, not a rumor.
Both cases followed the same pattern: the consumer escalated formally rather than just calling in. The BBB complaint route appears to be a reliable trigger for deletion when the underlying account has any basis for dispute, whether that is fraud, an error in the balance, or failure to validate.
How CBE Group resolves BBB complaints
Know What Is on Your Report Before You Negotiate With CBE Group
The consumers who get deletions from The CBE Group are the ones who know exactly what error or dispute ground they are working with. A free 3-bureau audit shows you what the entry actually says and whether you have grounds to dispute before you even ask for pay-for-delete.
Is paid collection better than unpaid on a credit report?
A paid collection is slightly better than an unpaid one, but neither is good. Under FICO 8, both paid and unpaid collections count as negative marks. The difference in score impact is small. The only outcome that meaningfully improves your score is full deletion of the tradeline. Paying without getting a pay-for-delete agreement leaves the damage in place for up to 7 years.
The pie chart above shows why paying a collection without deletion often does less for your score than people expect. The majority of lenders, especially mortgage underwriters, still use FICO 8 or older models where both paid and unpaid collections carry similar weight. VantageScore 4.0, which ignores paid collections entirely, is not yet widely used for credit approval decisions.
This is why the pay-for-delete outcome matters so much. It removes the entry from every scoring model at once. It does not matter which model your lender uses if the account is not on your report at all.
How to request pay for delete from The CBE Group
To request pay for delete from The CBE Group, send a written letter by certified mail offering to settle the account in exchange for written confirmation that they will submit deletion requests to all three credit bureaus. Do not pay before receiving the signed agreement. Alternatively, filing a BBB complaint with a clear description of any error or dispute is the most documented trigger for CBE Group submitting bureau deletions on their own.
There are two paths that have worked, based on documented consumer accounts and BBB records.
Path one: direct pay-for-delete negotiation. Write to The CBE Group at 1309 Technology Parkway, Cedar Falls, IA 50613. Offer to settle the account for an agreed amount in exchange for written confirmation of tradeline deletion from all three bureaus. Keep the letter short and specific. Mention the account number, the amount you are offering, and the exact condition: signed confirmation of deletion before any payment is sent. Get the signed agreement. Then pay.
Path two: BBB complaint escalation. File a detailed complaint at bbb.org describing the specific reason the account is disputed, whether that is fraud, an error in the balance, an incorrect original creditor, or failure to validate. The BBB complaint record shows that CBE Group's compliance team responds to these with deletion requests in a significant share of cases, particularly when the underlying account has any question of accuracy. This path has worked even without a settlement payment when the debt itself is found to be invalid.
How much does your score recover after a CBE Group deletion?
The score impact of removing a collection depends on your starting score and how many other negative items remain on your report. The chart below shows the estimated recovery curve for two common scenarios: a borrower whose CBE Group collection is their only negative item, and a borrower who has multiple negatives.
If The CBE Group collection is your only negative item, deletion can move your score into the 700s within 30 to 90 days. If you have other collections or late payments remaining, the recovery is slower but still meaningful. This is why addressing all negative items simultaneously produces the fastest results.
Will Paying The CBE Group Improve Your Credit Score?
Paying The CBE Group without a pay-for-delete agreement will not significantly improve your credit score. The collection account changes from "unpaid" to "paid," but it remains on your report for up to 7 years. Under FICO 8, the model used by most lenders, paid and unpaid collections carry similar negative weight. Your score will only improve meaningfully if the tradeline is fully deleted, either through a pay-for-delete agreement or a successful FCRA dispute.
Here is how each outcome compares for your credit score specifically:
- Pay without deletion: The balance becomes zero, which removes a small portion of the damage. You may see a 5 to 15 point improvement, but the collection mark stays and continues to affect lending decisions for years.
- Pay with pay-for-delete: The entire tradeline is removed from all three bureaus. Score improvement is immediate and significant, typically 30 to 100 points depending on your starting score and what else is on your report.
- Dispute without paying: If The CBE Group cannot validate the debt, the entry is removed without any payment. This is the best outcome financially and for your credit score.
- Do nothing: The account ages and its impact on your score gradually decreases over time, but it remains visible to lenders until the 7-year FCRA removal date.
The bottom line is that paying The CBE Group only helps your credit score if deletion is part of the deal. Payment alone is not worth much from a credit recovery standpoint unless you are also getting rid of the tradeline.
What Happens If The CBE Group Refuses Pay for Delete?
If The CBE Group refuses a pay-for-delete request, you still have options. You can file a BBB complaint, which has triggered deletion in documented cases even without a direct payment. You can file an FCRA dispute with all three credit bureaus if any inaccuracy exists in the entry. You can file a CFPB complaint if they violated the FDCPA. And if the debt is past the statute of limitations, you can challenge their right to collect at all. A refusal to offer pay-for-delete is not the end of the process.
In practice, "no" from a frontline phone representative at The CBE Group is not the same as a final answer from their compliance team. Consumer accounts on Reddit and BBB show that direct phone requests are frequently declined, but the same accounts show that formal escalations through BBB complaints and certified mail dispute letters produce different results. The documented deletions in CBE Group's BBB file were not triggered by phone calls. They were triggered by formal written escalations.
Your next steps after a refusal, in order of documented effectiveness:
- File a BBB complaint at bbb.org describing the specific basis for your dispute. CBE Group's compliance team, not a frontline collector, handles these. BBB records show their compliance team has submitted deletion requests in a significant share of resolved complaints.
- File an FCRA dispute with all three bureaus if the entry contains any error in the balance, date, original creditor name, or account number. The collector must verify every detail. If they cannot, the account is removed regardless of whether they agree to pay-for-delete.
- File a CFPB complaint at consumerfinance.gov/complaint if The CBE Group violated any FDCPA rule during the collection process, including failing to send a validation notice, calling outside permitted hours, or continuing to contact you after a cease-and-desist.
- Check the statute of limitations in your state. If the debt is too old to be legally enforced in court, you have additional leverage in negotiations and additional grounds to dispute the reporting under state consumer protection law.
We Handle the Pay-for-Delete Negotiation So You Do Not Have To
Getting deletion from The CBE Group requires the right escalation at the right time. Our team identifies the strongest dispute ground for your specific account and manages every step from validation to bureau confirmation.
Audit your 3-bureau report for every CBE Group entry and error
Send debt validation letters and identify grounds for deletion
File FCRA disputes and BBB complaints where appropriate
Negotiate pay-for-delete in writing with bureau confirmation tracking
Frequently Asked Questions
Will paying The CBE Group improve your credit score?
Not significantly on its own. Paying without a pay-for-delete agreement changes the account status from "unpaid" to "paid," but the collection account stays on your report for up to 7 years. Under FICO 8, both paid and unpaid collections carry significant negative weight. Your score improves meaningfully only when the tradeline is fully deleted, either through a pay-for-delete agreement or a successful FCRA dispute.
What happens if The CBE Group refuses pay for delete?
A refusal from a frontline representative is not the end of the process. File a BBB complaint, which has triggered deletion in documented CBE Group cases. File FCRA disputes with all three bureaus if any error exists in the entry. File a CFPB complaint if any FDCPA violation occurred. Check whether the debt is past your state's statute of limitations. Each of these paths has produced deletion for consumers after an initial refusal.
Does the CBE Group do pay for delete?
Yes, in documented cases. BBB complaint records from 2025 and 2026 include verified written responses from The CBE Group confirming they submitted deletion requests to all three major credit bureaus. This most commonly happened when consumers filed BBB complaints or when the underlying account was disputed as fraudulent or inaccurate. CBE Group does not have a published pay-for-delete policy, but it is an achievable outcome through the right approach.
What is pay for delete?
Pay for delete is an agreement where a debt collector removes a collection account entirely from your credit report in exchange for payment. Instead of leaving a "paid collection" that stays on your report for up to 7 years, pay for delete results in the tradeline being fully removed from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. The FCRA does not require collectors to offer this, but many do when asked formally and in writing.
How do I ask CBE Group for pay for delete?
Send a written letter by certified mail to The CBE Group at 1309 Technology Parkway, Cedar Falls, IA 50613. Offer to settle the account for an agreed amount in exchange for a signed written confirmation that they will submit deletion requests to all three bureaus. Alternatively, filing a BBB complaint at bbb.org is a well-documented trigger for CBE Group submitting deletions on their own, especially when any error or dispute ground exists.
Is paid collection better than unpaid on a credit report?
Slightly, but not by much under FICO 8, which most lenders use. Paid collections are treated more favorably under FICO 9 and VantageScore 4.0, but those models are not yet widely used for loan approvals. The only outcome that truly improves your score is full deletion of the tradeline through a pay-for-delete agreement or a successful FCRA dispute.
Does paying a collection hurt your credit?
Paying a collection without a pay-for-delete agreement does not hurt your credit further, but it does not help it as much as most people expect. The account changes from "unpaid collection" to "paid collection," which is slightly better, but the negative mark remains visible to lenders for up to 7 years. Your score may improve modestly because the balance is now zero, but the improvement is significantly smaller than what you would see from a full deletion.
How long does a CBE Group collection stay on my credit report?
Under the FCRA, a CBE Group collection account can stay on your credit report for up to 7 years from the date of the original delinquency, not from the date CBE Group first reported it. A pay-for-delete agreement or a successful FCRA dispute can remove it before the 7-year period ends. If it is still showing after 7 years, dispute it immediately with all three bureaus as it must be removed.
Related Reads
- How to Handle The CBE Group Debt Collection — The main guide covering everything about CBE Group: who they are, who they collect for, how to stop their calls, and your full FDCPA rights.
- How to Use a Pay-for-Delete Letter to Improve Your Credit Score — Step-by-step guide with a customizable template you can send directly to The CBE Group.
- Paid vs. Unpaid Collections: Which Is Better for Your Credit? — A full comparison of how each status affects your score under different scoring models.
- Paid Collections on Your Credit Report: What They Mean and How to Remove Them — What happens after you pay a collection and what your options are if it is still on your report.