When a bank, credit card, or debt collector won't fix something on their own, the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is the regulator that makes them. Companies respond to CFPB complaints because the CFPB tracks who responds and who doesn't.
Who this pack is for
You have a problem with a financial company that won't fix on its own — a bank that won't refund a fraudulent charge, a credit card issuer that won't reverse a billing error, a debt collector violating the FDCPA, a mortgage servicer mishandling your escrow, a student-loan servicer claiming you don't qualify for forgiveness you do qualify for, a credit bureau that won't remove an inaccurate item. You've already tried calling the company. You may have written. You're not getting anywhere. The CFPB receives the complaint, forwards it to the company with a 15-day response window, and publishes the complaint in a public database — companies care about the public record.
When to use it
File the complaint after one or two attempts to resolve directly with the company have failed, but before the situation has escalated to litigation. The CFPB process works best as middle ground — the company knows the regulator is watching but the lawyers haven't been retained. Submit at consumerfinance.gov/complaint with the narrative the pack drafts; you can also send by mail, by phone, or by fax. The CFPB tags each complaint with the company's response (timely, on-time-with-relief, on-time-no-relief, untimely, no-response) and publishes everything except your contact info. Companies with poor response stats end up on the agency's enforcement radar.
What it doesn't cover
The CFPB has jurisdiction over banks, credit unions, payday lenders, mortgage servicers, debt collectors, credit bureaus, student loan servicers, prepaid cards, money transfer services, and most consumer financial products. It does not regulate: insurance (state insurance commissioners), the SEC's territory of investments and broker-dealers, employer-sponsored retirement plans (DOL/EBSA), tax issues (IRS Taxpayer Advocate), telecommunications (FCC), and most direct retail merchants. For non-CFPB issues, file with the appropriate regulator. The pack focuses on financial-product complaints; for non-financial issues, this isn't the right tool.
Common questions
Sources
Primary legal sources cited above. These link to free, public versions of the statutes, regulations, and case law referenced in this pack.
Pike provides plain-language legal information, not legal advice. State and local rules change. If money, custody, or your housing is on the line, talk to a licensed attorney or your local legal aid office.