What the CFPB Complaint System Changes Mean for Borrowers

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Quick answer: The CFPB announced changes to its consumer complaint system in June 2026 to improve accuracy and reduce duplicates, but borrowers can still file complaints about lenders for free through consumerfinance.gov. The process remains the same, and federal law requires companies to respond within 15 days under the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010.

Key Takeaways

  • The CFPB complaint portal at consumerfinance.gov remains open and free for all consumers to report lender disputes
  • Companies must respond to CFPB complaints within 15 calendar days per 12 CFR 1034.4
  • The June 2026 reforms focus on database integrity, not on restricting who can file or what issues qualify
  • Your complaint becomes part of a public database that regulators, researchers, and journalists use to identify patterns of harm

๐Ÿ’ฐ What changed in the CFPB complaint system in 2026?

On June 24, 2026, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau announced reforms to its complaint intake and publication process. The agency stated it is addressing duplicate filings, improving data validation, and ensuring that complaints reflect actual consumer experiences rather than bulk submissions from third parties.

The core process stays the same. You visit consumerfinance.gov, select the financial product, describe your issue, and upload supporting documents. The CFPB forwards your complaint to the company within one business day. The company then has 15 calendar days to respond under CFPB rules at 12 CFR 1034.4.

The reforms target backend quality control, not access. If you have a legitimate dispute with a bank, credit union, or online lender, you can still file. The CFPB clarified that complaints must include enough detail to be actionable and must come directly from the consumer or their authorized representative, not aggregators submitting on behalf of people who did not opt in.

๐Ÿ“Š How do I file a CFPB complaint about my personal loan?

Go to consumerfinance.gov/complaint and click “Submit a Complaint.” You will need basic information about your lender and your account. The portal walks you through a short questionnaire.

Choose the product category that matches your issue. For personal loans, select “Debt collection” if the complaint is about collection practices, or “Personal line of credit” or “Installment loan” if it is about loan terms, fees, or servicing. Be specific in your narrative. Attach account statements, emails, or letters that support your claim.

The CFPB does not act as your lawyer or force a refund. It routes your complaint to the company, monitors the response, and adds sanitized data to its public database. If a company ignores repeated complaints or violates federal law, the CFPB can open an enforcement action under its authority in 12 U.S.C. 5564. You will receive email updates when the company responds and when the CFPB closes your case.

For disputes covered by the Truth in Lending Act, you also have a separate right to send a written billing error notice directly to your creditor under 15 U.S.C. 1666. That process runs in parallel to the CFPB complaint and has its own 60-day timeline from when you receive your statement.

โš ๏ธ Which issues does the CFPB accept complaints about?

The CFPB handles complaints about products and practices regulated under federal consumer finance law. That includes personal loans, credit cards, mortgages, auto loans, student loans, payday loans, debt collection, credit reporting, checking accounts, and money transfers.

Common complaint categories for personal loan borrowers include:

  • Unexpected fees or APR changes not disclosed at origination
  • Problems with autopay or payment application
  • Aggressive or illegal debt collection tactics
  • Refusal to honor a payoff quote or release a lien
  • Loan sold to a new servicer without proper notice
  • Credit report errors after the loan is paid off

The CFPB does not handle general customer service complaints or disputes about loan denial if the lender followed the law. If you were denied and did not receive an adverse action notice explaining why, that is a violation of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act at 15 U.S.C. 1691 and you should file a complaint. If you simply disagree with the underwriting decision but the lender sent a proper notice, the CFPB cannot override that business judgment.

๐Ÿ” What happens after I submit a complaint?

The CFPB reviews your submission for completeness, then forwards it to the company. The company has 15 calendar days to respond to you and to the CFPB with an explanation of what it did to address your issue. You receive a copy of that response through the online portal.

You can then review the company response and tell the CFPB whether you are satisfied. If you are not satisfied, the CFPB flags that in its internal records. A pattern of unresolved complaints can trigger supervisory exams or enforcement referrals.

The CFPB publishes most complaints in a public database at consumerfinance.gov/data-research/consumer-complaints after removing personal information. Companies can add a public response defending their actions. This database is searchable by company name, product type, issue, state, and date. Journalists, state attorneys general, and private attorneys use it to spot systemic problems.

Complaint Stage Timeframe What Happens
Submission Day 0 You file online at consumerfinance.gov
Routing Day 1 CFPB forwards complaint to company
Company response due Day 15 Company must respond per 12 CFR 1034.4
Your review Day 16-30 You rate the response and close or dispute
Public database Ongoing Sanitized complaint published after closure

๐Ÿ“ Does a CFPB complaint guarantee a refund or loan cancellation?

No. The CFPB does not have the power to order a company to cancel your debt, refund fees, or change your loan terms unless it opens a formal enforcement action and proves a legal violation. The complaint process is administrative, not judicial.

What a complaint does is create a record. It forces the company to review your case and explain its position in writing. If your complaint reveals a pattern of harm affecting many borrowers, the CFPB can use that evidence in a larger investigation. The agency has authority under 12 U.S.C. 5536 to sue for unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or practices.

If you want binding relief, you may need to pursue arbitration (if your loan agreement requires it), file in small claims court, or consult a consumer attorney. Many consumer protection statutes, including the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act at 15 U.S.C. 1692, allow you to sue for statutory damages plus attorney fees if the company violated your rights. A CFPB complaint can be evidence in that case, but it is not a substitute for legal action.

For personalized help comparing loan terms or understanding your rights before a dispute escalates, visit our personal loan hub or use our APR calculator to verify what you are actually paying.

โ“ Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a CFPB complaint take?

The company must respond within 15 calendar days under CFPB rules. You then have time to review and accept or dispute that response. Most complaints close within 30 to 60 days from submission.

Will filing a CFPB complaint hurt my credit score?

No. Filing a complaint does not appear on your credit report and cannot directly affect your score. However, if the underlying issue is a missed payment or account in collections, that will affect your credit regardless of the complaint.

Can I file a complaint if I signed an arbitration agreement?

Yes. The CFPB complaint process is separate from arbitration. Your loan agreement may require arbitration for lawsuits, but it cannot stop you from filing a government complaint under the Consumer Financial Protection Act.

What if the lender does not respond to my CFPB complaint?

The CFPB tracks non-responsive companies and can escalate to enforcement or supervisory action. If your complaint remains unresolved, you can pursue other remedies such as small claims court or a consumer attorney.

โœ… The Bottom Line

The June 2026 CFPB reforms do not change your right to file a complaint about a lender, servicer, or debt collector. The process remains free, accessible at consumerfinance.gov, and backed by federal law requiring companies to respond in 15 days. The changes target data quality, not access.

If a personal loan lender violates the Truth in Lending Act, charges undisclosed fees, or ignores your payment, file a CFPB complaint and keep copies of all documents. For more on understanding loan terms and borrower protections, check our finance glossary and stay informed about your rights.

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