Join us on LinkedIn Follow us on Twitter Like us on Facebook Follow us on Instagram
 
  OCTOBER RESEARCH STORE SUBSCRIBE LOG IN
AddControlToContainer_DynamicNavigation3
The Legal Description > News > CFPB launches consumer complaint database

CFPB launches consumer complaint database

Email A Friend Printer Friendly Version
1 comments
Regulatory Updates
Monday, April 1, 2013

On March 28, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) went live with the nation’s largest public database of federal consumer financial complaints, opening up to consumers across the country information on more than 90,000 individual complaints on financial products and services.

“By sharing these complaints with the public, we are creating greater transparency in consumer financial products and services,” said CFPB Director Richard Cordray at a field hearing in Des Moines, Iowa, where he announced the expansion of the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database. “The database is good for consumers and it is also good for honest businesses. We believe the marketplace of ideas can do great things with this data.”

Consumer complaint database
The launch expands the Consumer Complaint Database significantly from about 19,000 credit card complaints to more than 90,000 complaints on mortgages, student loans, bank accounts and services, other consumer loans and credit cards. In many cases, it includes the sub-category of products. For example, for mortgages it includes reverse mortgages, conventional fixed mortgages, conventional adjustable mortgages, and home equity loans or lines of credit.

The database allows the public to see what consumers complained about and why, as well as how and when the company in question responds. It has more than one million data points, covering approximately 450 companies. It includes the type of complaint, the date of submission, the consumer’s ZIP code and the company that the complaint concerns. The database also includes information about the actions taken on a complaint by those companies — whether the company’s response was timely, how the company responded, and whether the consumer disputed the company’s response. A consumer’s identity and other personal information is not included in the data.

The database allows users to easily track, sort, search, and download information. The data is also available via API (application programming interface), which allows developers to build applications, conduct analyses and perform research. Consumers can build their own visualizations, charts and graphs. The data can also be embedded on other websites and shared through social media.

The live database updates daily, so as the CFPB handles more complaints, more will be added. When the CFPB accepts consumer complaints about other financial products and services, they will be put on the database after a period of time. For example, credit reporting complaints, which the CFPB recently began to accept, will be included in the database in the near future.

Complaints are listed in the database only after the company responds to the complaint or after they have had the complaint for 15 days, whichever comes first. Importantly, while the allegations in the complaint are not verified, a commercial relationship between the consumer and the company is substantiated before the complaint is added to the database.

Companies can categorize their response to a complaint in a number of ways. Examples, and what they mean, include:

  • Monetary relief: The steps taken by the company in response to the complaint resulted or will result in measurable and verifiable monetary relief to the consumer.
  • Closed with non-monetary relief: The result was not monetary relief, but may have addressed some or all of the consumer’s complaint involving non-monetary requests.
  • Closed with explanation: The result included an explanation that was tailored to the individual consumer’s complaint. This category would be used if the explanation substantively meets the consumer’s desired resolution or explains why no further action will be taken.
  • Closed: The company closed the complaint without relief — monetary or non-monetary — or explanation.

Consumers are given the option to review and dispute company responses. The CFPB then reviews that feedback. The CFPB uses this along with other information, such as the timeliness of the company’s response, in a variety of ways, for example, to help prioritize complaints for investigation.

A call to action
The CFPB is encouraging the public, including consumers, analysts, developers, data scientists, civic hackers and companies that serve consumers, to analyze, augment and build on the public database to develop ways for consumers to access the complaint data or mash it up with other public data sets.

The CFPB would like the public to highlight innovative uses of the data, from visualizations to new tools, by tweeting @CFPB using the hashtag #CFPBdata.

A Snapshot of Consumer Complaints
The CFPB also published on its website another report containing aggregate data and analysis of all the 130,000 complaints it has received up to March 1, 2013. This number is larger than the 90,000 complaints in the public database because it includes complaints that have been referred to other regulatory agencies, found to be incomplete, are still being confirmed by the company, or are pending with the consumer or the CFPB.

The snapshot can be found at: http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201303_cfpb_Snapshot-March-2013.pdf

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, which created the CFPB, directs the bureau to make timely and understandable information available to consumers so they can make responsible decisions about consumer financial products and services. After asking the public for its opinion, the CFPB made credit card complaint data publically available in June 2012 by launching a beta version of the Consumer Complaint Database.

Today's other top stories
Appeals court hears dispute between mortgage assigner, insurer
Insurance Data Protection Act introduced to Senate
Trump administration proposes cutting $491 million from CISA budget
FHFA director accuses NY AG of mortgage fraud
Colorado passes bill to create title insurance industry advisory group


COMMENT BOX DISCLAIMER:
October Research is not responsible for the comments posted on its websites by readers. We will do our best to remove comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments.
Comments:

Be the first to leave a comment.

Leave your comment
Please enter a comment.
CAPTCHA Validation
CAPTCHA
Code:
Please enter the word displayed in the image above. Please enter the word displayed in the image above.
: 
Please enter your name.
: 
Please enter your email address.
This field must contain a valid email address.
Your Email is for reporting purposes only. It will NOT be displayed.
Popularity:
This article has been viewed 810 times.
News by Topic   News by Edition   In-depth Reports   Events   Subscribe
Court Report
Cybersecurity
Excess Equity
Industry News
Legislative Developments
Regulatory Updates
Remote Online Notarization
The Blotter
The TRID Journey
 
March 31, 2025
April 14, 2025
April 28, 2025
May 26, 2025
Archives
 
2025 State of the Industry
Cybersecurity Today
Technology as a Compliance Tool
Real Estate Compliance Outlook
Title Insurance Alternatives
eClosing Security
Attorney State Perspectives
Technology as a Compliance Tool
Archives
 
 
National Settlement Services Summit (NS3)
Women's Leadership Summit (WLS)
Webinars
 
Newsletter Subscriptions
Free Email Updates
Try a Free Edition
  About   Library   Other Publications  
 
The Legal Description
Contact / Editors
Advertise
Request a Media Kit
Social Media
Are You An Expert?
Subscriber Agreement
 
Blog - Tuesdays with Mary
Cybersecurity Central
Court Cases
Keys to Real Estate Podcast
Legislation
Position Papers
Regulations
RON Resource Center
 
The Title Report
RESPA News
Valuation Review
Dodd Frank Upate
 
                 
Copyright © 2000-2025 The Legal Description
An October Research, LLC publication
3046 Brecksville Road, Suite D, Richfield, OH 44286
(330) 659-6101, All Rights Reserved
www.thelegaldescription.com | Privacy Policy
VISIT OUR OTHER WEBSITES
> The Title Report
> RESPA News
> Dodd Frank Update
> Valuation Review
> NS3 The Summit
> Women's Leadership Summit
> October Research, LLC
> The October Store


Loading... Loading...
Featuring:
  • Delivery 3X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Comprehensive title insurance industry news
  • Recent acquisitions, mergers, real estate stats
  • Exclusive in-depth coverage of the industry's hottest stories
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Comprehensive Dodd-Frank coverage
  • The latest information from the CFPB
  • Full coverage of Congressional hearings
  • Updates on all agency actions
  • Analysis of controversial provisions
  • Release of newest studies and reports
Sign up today and...
  • Be one of the first to know where NS3 is being held
  • Learn about NS3 speakers and sessions
  • Save on registration with Super-Early Bird rates
  • Discover the networking opportunities NS3 offers
  • Find out if CE credits will be offered for your area
  • And much more
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Preview the latest RESPAnews.com Top Story
  • RESPA related headline news
  • Quote of the Week
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Legal, regulatory and legislative information impacting the settlement services industry
  • News from HUD, Congress, state legislatures and other regulatory agencies
  • Follow the lobbying efforts of all the major national real estate services organizations.
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • The industry's only full-time newsroom
  • Relevant, up-to-date appraisal industry news
  • Covering the hottest stories and industry trends
NEWS BY TOPIC
NEWS BY EDITION
IN-DEPTH REPORTS
EVENTS
LIBRARY
FREE EMAIL UPDATES
ABOUT
SUBSCRIBE
Court Report
Cybersecurity
Excess Equity
Industry News
Legislative Developments
Regulatory Updates
Remote Online Notarization
State AG Enforcement
The Blotter
Current Edition
April 14, 2025
March 31, 2025
March 17, 2025
March 3, 2025
Archives
2025 Voice of the Title Agent
2025 State of the Industry
Cybersecurity Today
2024 Title Technology
eClosing Innovations
Real Estate Compliance Outlook
Title Insurance Alternatives
Archives
National Settlement
Services Summit (NS3)
Women's Leadership
Summit (WLS)
Webinars
Evolving Realtor Relationships
2025 Economic Outlook Series
CFPB's Shake-Up & Its Impact
Artificial Intelligence for Title
Industry and Regulatory Outlook
RESPA Updates You Need to Know
Strategies post-NAR settlement
Evolving Consumer Relationships
Fraud Threats Facing Title
Excess Equity
2024 Economic Forecast Series
Securing Your Cyber Network
Webinar Archives
Cyber Solutions Showcase
Keys to Real Estate Podcast
Blog - Tuesdays with Mary
Excess Equity Watch
Cybersecurity Central
eClosing Solutions Showcase
Executive Interview Series
RON Resource Center
Case Law
Legislation
Position Papers
Regulations
By Year
By State
2012
2011
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Comment Letters
White Papers
Testimony
The Legal Description
Contact Us
Advertise
Request a Media Kit
Are You An Expert?
Subscriber Agreement
Social Media