If you have any medical debt, you’ll be glad to know it will no longer appear on your credit report. On Tuesday, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) announced the finalization of a rule ...
The agency estimated the rule will remove more than $49 billion in medical bills from the credit reports of about 15 million ...
Two groups representing the credit reporting and credit union industries have filed a lawsuit challenging a new rule adopted ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau finalized a rule that will remove medical bills from credit reports to end what the bureau called "coercive debt collection practices." ...
There is an estimated $49 billion in unpaid medical bills from the credit reports of roughly 15 million Americans.
Experian was sued Tuesday by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which accused the Costa Mesa-based credit bureau of ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is suing Experian, claiming the nationwide consumer reporting agency is ...
Trade groups file lawsuit against CFPB over new rule banning medical debt from credit reports, arguing it exceeds statutory authority.
The CFPB has sued Experian, claiming the company failed to properly investigate consumer credit report disputes.
Most medical debt will be scrapped from consumer credit reports under a final US rule implementing a Biden administration ...
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was born during the depths of the Great Depression, a means of shoring up banks when banks were routinely failing and erasing the wealth of Americans.