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CFPB Final Rule Revises ECOA Regulation B, Eliminates Disparate Impact

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Summary

On April 22, 2026, the CFPB issued a final rule revising Regulation B under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA), eliminating disparate impact liability from the Bureau's enforcement framework. The rule narrows standards for discouraging prospective credit applicants and imposes significant new restrictions on special purpose credit programs (SPCPs) offered by for-profit lenders, who are now prohibited from using protected characteristics as eligibility criteria. The rule will take effect 90 days after publication in the Federal Register.

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JD Supra is the legal industry's open library where US and UK law firms publish client alerts, regulatory analysis, and case commentaries. The Finance & Banking section aggregates everything published by partners at firms covering bank supervision, payments, capital markets, fintech, securitization, AML, and consumer finance. Around 400 alerts a month from across the bar. Watch this if you want primary-source law-firm thinking on the latest CFPB rule, OCC bulletin, FCA consultation, or Basel update, before it shows up in trade press. The signal-to-noise ratio is genuinely good because firms only publish when they have something to say to their own clients. GovPing pulls each alert with the firm name, author, and topic.

What changed

The CFPB finalized amendments to Regulation B under ECOA, removing all references to the 'effects test' and expressly stating that ECOA does not authorize disparate-impact liability. The rule narrows discouragement liability to statements reflecting discriminatory intent rather than broader conduct, and restricts for-profit creditors' use of special purpose credit programs tied to protected characteristics.\n\nLenders, particularly for-profit creditors offering SPCPs, should reassess fair lending compliance programs, marketing practices, and SPCP eligibility criteria to align with the revised federal framework. The rule's long-term durability may remain uncertain given expected litigation challenges.

Archived snapshot

Apr 25, 2026

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April 24, 2026

CFPB Revised Fair Lending Enforcement Framework Under ECOA

A.J.S. Dhaliwal, Mehul Madia, Maxwell Earp-Thomas Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP + Follow Contact LinkedIn Facebook X ;) Embed

On April 22, the CFPB issued a final rule revising Regulation B under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA). The rule eliminates disparate impact liability from the Bureau’s ECOA enforcement framework, narrows standards governing discouragement of prospective applicants, and imposes significant new restrictions on special purpose credit programs (SPCPs) offered by for-profit lenders. The rule will take effect 90 days after publication in the Federal Register.

The rule reflects a shift in how the Bureau intends to enforce ECOA and clarifies several areas that have historically been subject to regulatory interpretation. Specifically, the rule:

  • Eliminates disparate impact liability. The rule removes all references to the “effects test” from Regulation B and its commentary and expressly states that ECOA does not authorize disparate-impact liability. Under the revised framework, facially neutral policies are actionable only where they are intentionally designed or applied as proxies for prohibited characteristics.
  • Narrows discouragement standards. The rule retains ECOA’s prohibition on discouraging prospective applicants but limits its scope to statements reflecting discriminatory intent rather than broader conduct that could indirectly deter applicants. Discouragement liability now applies only to oral, written, or visual statements directed at applicants or prospective applicants where a creditor knows or should know that a reasonable person would interpret the statement as indicating that credit would be denied or offered on less favorable terms because of a protected characteristic. The Bureau also clarified that targeted outreach to particular communities will not, by itself, be treated as discouragement of others.
  • Restricts special-purpose credit programs. The rule preserves SPCPs but substantially narrows their availability for for-profit creditors. For-profit lenders are prohibited from using protected characteristics such as race, sex, or national origin as eligibility criteria, and must satisfy additional requirements to justify any use of common characteristics tied to historically underserved groups. The Bureau largely finalized the rule as proposed, making only clarifying edits despite receiving approximately 64,500 comments from industry participants, consumer advocates, state attorneys general, and members of Congress. The amendments represent one of the most consequential shifts in federal fair-lending policy in decades and are likely to prompt litigation challenging key aspects of the rule.

Putting It Into Practice: Recent developments have reflected diverging approaches to disparate impact liability, with federal policy moving to narrow its use (previously discussed here) while some states continue to expand or formalize disparate impact frameworks (previously discussed here). Lenders should reassess fair lending compliance programs, including marketing practices and special-purpose credit programs, to ensure alignment with evolving federal and state expectations. Litigation challenging the amendments is likely, meaning the long-term durability of these changes may remain uncertain for some time.

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DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.
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Last updated

Classification

Agency
Sheppard Mullin
Published
April 22nd, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Lenders
Industry sector
5221 Commercial Banking
Activity scope
Credit lending Fair lending compliance
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Finance
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
Dodd-Frank
Topics
Consumer Protection Civil Rights

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