The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has finalized a rule to keep medical bills off of consumers’ credit reports.
Opposition is quickly forming against the Biden administration’s rule to ban medical debt from appearing on consumers’ credit reports, threatening the viability of what could be a popular regulation.
A reader says a hotel charged his credit card for smoking in his room. He disagrees and says he didn’t. What should he do?
On January 7, 2025, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) issued a final rule that would generally prohibit lenders from considering ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has issued a proposed rule aimed at protecting the privacy of the public when using ...
The rule is set to take effect 60 days after publication in the Federal Register, although President-elect Donald Trump has ...
U.S. Auto Sales, which had multiple used car dealerships in Georgia, has been ordered by a federal judge to pay more than $42 ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”) filed an action on December 23, 2024, against Rocket Home Real Estate LLC (“Rocket Homes”), a ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's research found that the majority of buy now/pay later users are subprime borrowers ...
A cohort of bank industry interest groups called for the incoming Trump administration to pause all pending bank regulation and litigation and extend the timelines for implementing final rules issued ...
Credit reporting companies asked for a temporary pause on a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule barring medical debt ...
And it's really hard to deny that.” How does the CFPB help consumers? The CFPB's work spans the ...