The CFPB is Correcting Flaws to Restore Integrity and Utility to the Consumer Complaint System | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

https://www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/newsroom/the-cfpb-is-correcting-flaws-to-restore-integrity-and-utility-to-the-consumer-complaint-system/
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2026-06-25 14:23:59 · ataylor@vixio.com
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The consumer complaint portal has long been plagued by issues that severely limit its effectiveness in addressing consumers’ complaints and practical utility of its information.

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TITLE: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Corrects Consumer Complaint Portal System Integrity and Effectiveness BODY: On June 24, 2026, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) announced multiple concrete actions to address longstanding flaws in its consumer complaint portal system. The CFPB stated that the portal has been plagued by issues severely limiting its effectiveness in addressing consumer complaints and the practical utility of complaint data. Credit reporting complaints represent the largest share of all complaints submitted to the CFPB. Complaint volume increased dramatically, from more than 150,000 credit or consumer reporting complaints in 2019 to more than five million in 2025—an increase of more than 3,700 percent. The CFPB identified multiple factors driving this surge, including credit repair organizations misusing the complaint process, social media influencers encouraging followers to submit complaints, adoption of artificial intelligence tools, and new businesses seeking to boost credit scores by disputing accurate information. The CFPB stated that without addressing these issues, it cannot rely upon complaint portal data as a reliable reflection of actual market conditions or consumer experiences. The CFPB is implementing six key changes. First, it issued a new Company Portal Manual providing clear guidance on closure categories to standardize data across credit reporting agencies (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion). Second, the CFPB launched two-factor authentication and plans to implement address validation to enhance identity protections. Third, it is aligning the complaint process to statutory obligations under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) by requiring consumers to exhaust dispute rights directly with consumer reporting agencies before submitting complaints to the CFPB. Fourth, the CFPB is collaborating with agencies to provide greater specificity on administrative response categories. Fifth, it is developing educational resources highlighting costs and risks of credit repair services. Finally, the CFPB is building application programming interfaces (APIs) to more efficiently share complaint information with companies and is redefining operational categories, distinguishing complaints awaiting action for more than 30 calendar days as backlog from routine work in progress.
  • Scraped:2026-06-25 14:23:59
  • Created:2026-06-25 14:23:58
  • By:ataylor@vixio.com (61)