Medical debt may affect credit of 100 million Americans if CFPB rule is scrapped

Medical debt may affect credit of 100 million Americans if CFPB rule is scrapped
Two congressman have been branded ‘callous’ by introducing bill in Congress.
MAR 13, 2025

Just weeks before a new rule is due to come into force that would prohibit credit reporting firms from including medical debt in information provided to lenders, Congress is being asked to overturn it.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule means that millions of Americans with unpaid medical bills will not face adverse credit decisions as a result, but a bill introduced Wednesday by Senator Mike Rounds (R-SD) and Representative Ralph Norman (R-SC) is urging lawmakers to overturn it.

The rule is due to apply from March 27, although with the CFPB benched there is uncertainty as to how it would be enforced.

But in any case, a letter signed by 277 organizations is calling on Congress to vote down the bill, highlighting how “more than 100 million people owe at least $220 billion in medical debt and about 15 million people have medical debt on their credit reports.”

Recent reports highlighted how medical debt is now a major source of debt among Millennials and a key factor in rising credit card debt among older Americans.

“Being sick and having medical bills has little to do with whether people will pay their loan payments, but these members of Congress callously think it’s their job to allow medical debts to shut these folks out from access to credit or make credit more expensive for families struggling to make ends meet,” said Chi Chi Wu, senior attorney at the National Consumer Law Center.

The 15 million people with medical debts on their credit reports owe $49 billion according to CFPB data in 2024.

The NCLC says that those burdened by medical debt on their credit reports are more likely to live in the South and in predominantly Black and Latino/Hispanic neighborhoods, while those with disabilities are twice as likely to have past due medical bills as others, and veterans and servicemembers have as much as $6 billion in medical debt.

 “Medical debt should not prevent people from getting a loan for a car, a house, or starting a new business,” said Mona Shah, senior director of policy and strategy at Community Catalyst, while Erika Sussma, executive director at the Center for Survivor Agency and Justice, said that “Survivors of domestic violence are saddled with medical debt, resulting directly from the abuse they suffered at the hands of their partner. When creditors unjustly report medical debt on credit reports, it compounds the economic and physical harms survivors have already experienced and exposes survivors to increased risk of future violence.”

Latest News

Fed ends Wells Fargo's asset cap restriction, opening long-blocked path to growth
Fed ends Wells Fargo's asset cap restriction, opening long-blocked path to growth

The undoing of the penalty, which has hung over the Wall Street bank for seven years, marks a significant victory for CEO Charlie Scharf.

BNY Pershing teases upgrades to boost advisor, investor experience
BNY Pershing teases upgrades to boost advisor, investor experience

The big three custodian is unveiling new reporting features, UMA functionalities, and a new advisor growth network, along with other updates at its flagship conference.

Arizona seeks to strip advisor of license over GPB private placement sales
Arizona seeks to strip advisor of license over GPB private placement sales

Michael Bradley faces allegations of “improper recommendation to clients” who bought GPB securities.

Mega-RIA Mariner snaps up sports-focused Taurus Asset Management
Mega-RIA Mariner snaps up sports-focused Taurus Asset Management

The RIA behemoth overseeing more than half a trillion dollars in client assets is adding to that book with a $1.4 billion firm focused on pro athletes in New York.

Mercer Advisors lands third-biggest deal to date with Full Sail Capital
Mercer Advisors lands third-biggest deal to date with Full Sail Capital

With over 600 clients, the $71 billion RIA acquirer's latest partner marks its second transaction in Oklahoma.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave

SPONSORED The evolution of private credit

From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.