News

Unpaid medical bills are back on the table, which could mean lower credit scores for millions. A federal judge in Texas has ...
An estimated one-fifth of U.S. households have medical debt on their credit reports, a burden that makes it more expensive ...
A federal judge blocked a rule from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau that would have stopped medical bills from ...
The Trump administration joined with trade groups to ask a court to overturn a Biden-era rule that aimed to limit the impact ...
A federal judge in Texas removed a Biden-era finalized rule by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau that would have ...
The ruling targets a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule that would have removed medical debt from 15 million credit ...
CFPB research has indicated that medical debt on credit reports is “a poor predictor” of whether a person will repay a loan, ...
Consumers were dealt a blow after a federal judge in Texas voided a Biden-era rule that would ban the inclusion of medical ...
Americans’ unpaid medical bills will remain on their credit reports after a federal judge last week vacated a Biden-era Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) rule that would have removed such ...
In a win for credit bureaus and debt collectors, medical debt will be allowed to stay on your credit report after all.
According to a 2022 Kaiser Family Foundation analysis of Census Bureau data, 23 million people — nearly 1 in 10 adults — carry significant medical debt. In addition, a report by the Consumer ...
While many types of medical debt are disappearing from credit reports, ... By June 30, 2023, the three bureaus will also stop reporting unpaid medical debts under $500.