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CFPB ends disparate impact, tightens SPCPs through ECOA amendments
Home » Finance  »  CFPB ends disparate impact, tightens SPCPs through ECOA amendments
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is set to publish a final rule on Wednesday that eliminates disparate-impact liability under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act and adds new prohibitions for Special Purpose Credit Programs.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is set to publish a final rule on Wednesday that eliminates disparate-impact liability under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) and adds new prohibitions for Special Purpose Credit Programs (SPCPs).

The rule amends Regulation B, which implements ECOA, to clarify provisions related to disparate impact, the discouragement of prospective applicants and SPCPs.

“The Bureau’s final rule provides that ECOA does not authorize disparate-impact liability (effects test), further defines discouragement, and adds prohibitions and conditions for SPCPs,” the CFPB said.

The bureau issued a request for information on ECOA in 2020 and followed up with a notice of proposed rulemaking in November 2025. The agency received roughly 64,500 comments on the proposal.

Under the new language, the CFPB explicitly states that ECOA does not recognize the effects test. But creditors remain liable for intentional discrimination, including the use of facially neutral policies as a pretext for discriminatory practices. 

The rule also tightens restrictions on how lenders communicate with consumers. Lenders are prohibited from making any oral, written or visual statement that would lead a reasonable person to believe their credit application would be denied or granted on less favorable terms due to a prohibited characteristic.

For SPCPs, the regulation imposes significant new hurdles. For-profit organizations can no longer use race, color, national origin or sex to determine eligibility. If an organization uses characteristics such as religion, age or income, it must provide per-participant evidence proving that the borrower would not have received credit without the program.

“The Bureau believes that the amendment to the provisions related to disparate impact and discouragement are largely deregulatory in nature and therefore are expected to reduce burden for the covered persons,” it said

The agency noted that the current number of SPCPs is small, meaning the new restrictions will likely have a limited market impact.

The CFPB estimates the rule will affect roughly 12,000 depository institutions and 482,000 nondepository institutions subject to Regulation B.

The final rule takes effect 90 days after its publication in the Federal Register.