In a major change that could affect millions of Americans' credit scores, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Tuesday ...
Vice President Harris announced a final ruling by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to remove $49 billion in unpaid medical debt from consumer credit reports.
Unpaid medical bills will no longer appear on credit reports, where they can block people from mortgages, car loans or small ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau finalized a rule banning medical debt from being included on Americans' credit ...
Most medical debt will be scrapped from consumer credit reports under a final US rule implementing a Biden administration ...
Americans won’t have to worry about unpaid medical bills damaging their credit reports and scores much longer.
Credit-reporting companies will be banned from including medical debt on credit reports, under a rule finalized by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The rule isn’t slated to go into effect ...
Lenders will no longer be able to consider medical bills in making loan decisions and the bills will be excluded from credit ...
The move, which comes less than two weeks before President-elect Donald Trump is set to take office, represents a challenge to the new administration.
President Joe Biden's outgoing administration announced on Tuesday a ban on medical debt in American consumers' credit ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) on Tuesday finalized its rule barring medical debt from being included on ...
Credit-reporting companies and debt collectors have previously opposed the policy, which could face political and legal ...