On May 16, Vermont Governor Phil Scott signed into law S. 27, a medical debt relief measure that prohibits the inclusion of medical debt on consumer credit reports and establishes a state-funded initiative to abolish qualifying medical debt held by Vermont residents.Continue Reading Vermont Enacts Law Prohibiting Medical Debt Reporting and Funding Debt Relief Initiative

On May 9, the NYDFS announced that Governor Kathy Hochul signed New York’s FY2026 Budget into law, enacting two major consumer financial protection measures. The budget establishes a licensing and supervision framework for Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) lenders operating in New York and supports NYDFS’s January 2025 proposal to cap overdraft fees and prohibit certain high-cost practices (previously discussed here). Key provisions of the budget include:Continue Reading New York Enacts BNPL and Overdraft Fee Restrictions

On May 15, the CFPB rescinded its May 2022 interpretive rule that had expanded state enforcement authority under Section 1042 of the Consumer Financial Protection Act (CFPA). The Bureau now maintains that the previous guidance misread the statute and improperly extended state authority beyond what Congress intended.Continue Reading CFPB Narrows State Enforcement Powers by Rescinding 2022 Interpretative Rule

The Texas House and Senate introduced House Bill 700 and Senate Bill 2677 to regulate commercial sales-based financing transactions. The proposed legislation would impose standardized disclosure requirements, require broker registration, and subject these transactions to the state’s usury laws. Continue Reading Texas Legislature Proposes Disclosure Rules for Commercial Financing 

On April 16, the Colorado General Assembly enacted House Bill 25-1201, replacing the state’s prior money transmitter law with the Money Transmission Modernization Act (the “Act”). Modeled on the multistate framework developed by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors (CSBS), the Act aims to align Colorado’s licensing and oversight regime with standards adopted in other states, while updating key regulatory definitions, exemptions, prudential requirements, and enforcement tools. Continue Reading Colorado Overhauls Money Transmission Law to Align with Multistate Licensing Standards 

In January 2025, the Maryland Office of Financial Regulation (the “OFR”) issued a guidance stating that assignees of residential mortgage loans, including certain passive trusts, were required to hold a Maryland mortgage lender license and, in certain circumstances, an installment loan license (previously discussed here). In response to this, the Maryland House and Senate passed separate but identical bills known as the Maryland Secondary Market Stability Act of 2025 (the “Act”). The Act was signed into law by Maryland Governor Wes Moore on April 22, and became effective immediately. Continue Reading Maryland Enacts Law Exempting Passive Trusts from Mortgage and Installment Loan Licensing Requirements

On April 11, North Dakota enacted HB 1127, overhauling its regulatory framework for financial institutions and nonbank financial service providers. The law amends multiple chapters of the North Dakota Century Code and creates a new data security mandate for financial corporations—a category that includes non-depository entities regulated by the Department of Financial Institutions (DFI). It also expands the licensing requirement for brokers to include “alternative financing products,” potentially impacting a broad array of fintech providers.Continue Reading North Dakota Expands Data Security Requirements and Issues New Licensing Requirements for Brokers

On April 17, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost announced that the state has filed a lawsuit against a wholesale mortgage lender, alleging that the company engaged in a statewide scheme to mislead borrowers and inflate mortgage costs through deceptive broker steering practices. The AG’s office is seeking a jury trial on all claims.Continue Reading Ohio AG Sues Mortgage Lender for Illegal Broker Steering Scheme

On April 14, New York Attorney General Letitia James announced two separate lawsuits against earned wage access providers—one against a company that issues advances directly to consumers, and another targeting a provider that operates through employer partnerships. Both actions allege that the companies engaged in illegal payday lending schemes, charging fees and tips that resulted in annual percentage rates (APRs) far in excess of New York’s civil and criminal usury caps.Continue Reading New York AG Sues Earned Wage Access Companies for Allegedly Unlawful Lending Practices

On March 20, the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) entered into a consent order with a money transmitter, joining a group of state financial regulators acting through a multi-state task force coordinated by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors (CSBS) and the Money Transmitter Regulators Association (MTRA). The regulators alleged that the company violated state money transmission laws by failing to satisfy outstanding transmission liabilities, maintain adequate net worth and permissible investments, and continue licensed operations in a financially sound manner.Continue Reading NYDFS Joins Multistate Action Against Money Transmitter for Financial and Licensing Violations