Changeflow GovPing Government General Oklahoma AG Sues OneMain Financial for Hidden Fees
Urgent Enforcement Added Final

Oklahoma AG Sues OneMain Financial for Hidden Fees

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Filed March 18th, 2026
Detected March 18th, 2026
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Summary

Oklahoma Attorney General Genter Drummond, joined by 12 other state attorneys general, has filed a lawsuit against OneMain Financial for allegedly charging consumers hundreds of millions of dollars in hidden fees and interest through a bait-and-switch lending scheme. The lawsuit seeks restitution, penalties, and injunctive relief to prevent future illegal practices.

What changed

Oklahoma Attorney General Genter Drummond, along with attorneys general from 12 other states, has filed a lawsuit against OneMain Financial, Inc. and related entities. The suit alleges that OneMain engaged in a nationwide bait-and-switch lending scheme, charging consumers hundreds of millions of dollars in hidden fees and interest by deceptively packing loans with add-on products. The complaint details how OneMain allegedly rushes consumers through loan documents, buries terms in fine print, and even charges for rejected add-ons, contradicting its advertised clear, upfront terms.

This enforcement action requires immediate attention from financial institutions, particularly installment lenders, to review their sales practices and fee structures. Regulated entities should be aware of the potential for similar scrutiny from state attorneys general regarding deceptive add-on product sales. The lawsuit seeks restitution for affected consumers, penalties for violations of state laws, and a court order to cease illegal practices, potentially impacting OneMain's credit reporting and ongoing legal actions against customers. While no specific compliance deadline is stated for other entities, the implications suggest a need for proactive review of consumer lending practices to avoid similar allegations and penalties.

What to do next

  1. Review consumer loan origination processes for add-on product disclosures and sales tactics.
  2. Ensure all loan-related fees and products are clearly communicated and agreed upon by consumers.
  3. Verify that employee compensation structures do not incentivize deceptive sales practices.

Penalties

Restitution for consumers, penalties for violating state laws, and a court order preventing future illegal practices and requiring withdrawal of negative credit reporting and abandonment of related legal proceedings.

Source document (simplified)

Drummond sues OneMain Financial for alleged bait and switch lending scheme

Tweet PRINT Email Wednesday, March 18, 2026 OKLAHOMA CITY (March 18, 2026) – Attorney General Genter Drummond and 12 other state attorneys general have announced a lawsuit against OneMain Financial, Inc. and related entities alleging that the installment lender charged consumers nationwide hundreds of millions of dollars in hidden fees and interest.

With 19 branches operating in Oklahoma, OneMain Financial advertises high-cost installment loans with “clear, upfront terms,” but it packs those loans with hidden insurance policies and other add-on products that inflate the cost of the loans by hundreds or thousands of dollars. OneMain rushes consumers through fine-print loan documents containing dense terms and conditions for the add-ons. OneMain often hides the add-ons, sometimes misrepresents them, or even charges consumers who outright reject them.

"Oklahomans deserve honesty and transparency when they walk into a lender's office," Drummond said. "Lenders should not be hiding costly products in the fine print or rushing borrowers through contracts. My office will continue to hold companies accountable when they attempt to take advantage of hardworking consumers."

The lawsuit alleges the following about OneMain’s bait and switch scheme:

  • OneMain does not advertise that it sells add-on products, so consumers who come through its doors have no reason to expect the company to push these products.
  • OneMain has written policies that purport to prevent unlawful add-on packing, but the company’s actual processes operate nothing like its written policies.
  • OneMain puts financial pressure on its employees to pack add-ons.
  • OneMain rushes consumers through a loan closing process in which its employees often control the computer screen that shows the loan documents. This does not allow the consumer time to review each page of the loan application as the employee scrolls through the contract.
  • OneMain buries the fine print that mentions the add-on products inside 50 pages of legalese, which OneMain prevents consumers from reading before accepting the loan contract.
  • OneMain often closes loans on smartphones, where already small print shrinks to an illegible size.
  • OneMain also misleads consumers when encouraging them to refinance their loans by tacking on add-on products and by hiding key terms. With this lawsuit, Drummond and the coalition are seeking restitution for consumers who were unlawfully charged for these add-on products, penalties for violating state laws, and to release all unlawful profits. The lawsuit also seeks a court order preventing OneMain from continuing its illegal practices and requiring OneMain to withdraw any negative information reported to credit agencies that may impact its customers’ credit scores and to abandon any legal proceedings against customers related to the add-on loan products.

Joining Drummond in this lawsuit are the attorneys general from Colorado, Maryland, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin.

Any consumers who believe that they or someone they know may be a victim of the business practices of OneMain Financial should file a complaint with Office of the Oklahoma Attorney General Consumer Protection Unit at 1-833-681-1895.

Read the lawsuit.

Last Modified on Mar 18, 2026

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
GP
Filed
March 18th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Consumers Financial advisers
Geographic scope
National (US)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Protection
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Financial Services Consumer Finance

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