If you were denied credit, offered worse terms, or discouraged from applying because of your race, sex, marital status, age, national origin, or receipt of public assistance, you may have a claim under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA). The ECOA, codified at 15 U.S.C. § 1691, makes it unlawful for any creditor to discriminate against any applicant in any aspect of a credit transaction on the basis of several protected characteristics. Violations of the ECOA can result in actual damages, punitive damages up to $10,000 for individuals, and attorney's fees. Rausa Russo Law, PLLC represents consumers across New York and nationwide who have been harmed by discriminatory lending practices.
What This Law Covers
The Equal Credit Opportunity Act was enacted in 1974 and expanded in 1976 to address discrimination in the credit marketplace. Codified at 15 U.S.C. §§ 1691-1691f and implemented by Regulation B (12 C.F.R. § 1002), the ECOA applies to every aspect of a credit transaction, from application through servicing and collection.
The ECOA protects the following classes of applicants from credit discrimination:
- Race or color: No creditor may consider an applicant's race or skin color in any credit decision
- Religion: An applicant's religious affiliation or beliefs cannot factor into lending decisions
- National origin: A creditor cannot discriminate based on the country of an applicant's birth, ancestry, or ethnic background
- Sex: Includes discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation, as confirmed by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's interpretive guidance
- Marital status: Whether the applicant is married, single, divorced, separated, or widowed cannot be used as a basis for denying credit or imposing different terms
- Age: An applicant's age cannot be the sole basis for denying credit, though age may be used as a factor in limited circumstances in credit scoring systems
- Receipt of public assistance: The fact that all or part of an applicant's income derives from public assistance programs (such as Social Security, SSI, SNAP, or welfare) cannot be a basis for denying credit
- Good-faith exercise of rights: A creditor cannot retaliate against an applicant for exercising any right under the Consumer Credit Protection Act, which includes the FCRA, FDCPA, TILA, and other federal consumer protection statutes
The ECOA applies to all creditors, broadly defined. This includes banks, credit unions, mortgage lenders, credit card companies, finance companies, auto dealers, retailers that offer financing, and any other person who regularly extends, renews, or continues credit. It covers all types of credit transactions, including mortgages, auto loans, personal loans, credit cards, business loans, and student loans.
Common Violations
Credit discrimination can take many forms, from overt denials to subtle practices that disproportionately affect protected classes. Common ECOA violations include:
- Discouraging applications: A creditor discourages a prospective applicant from applying because of a protected characteristic. This can include making discouraging statements, providing less information about available products, or directing applicants to less favorable products based on race, ethnicity, or other prohibited factors.
- Imposing different terms and conditions: Offering less favorable interest rates, higher fees, shorter repayment periods, or more restrictive conditions to applicants based on a protected class. This includes pricing discrimination, where similarly situated borrowers receive different rates based on race or other prohibited factors.
- Considering prohibited factors: Using race, national origin, sex, or other protected characteristics as factors in the credit decision, whether explicitly in underwriting criteria or implicitly through proxy variables that serve as stand-ins for protected classes.
- Requiring a spousal co-signer: Under Regulation B (12 C.F.R. § 1002.7(d)), a creditor generally cannot require the signature of an applicant's spouse if the applicant individually qualifies for the credit. Blanket policies requiring spousal co-signatures violate the ECOA.
- Inquiring about childbearing plans: A creditor cannot ask whether an applicant plans to have children or is pregnant, and cannot consider the likelihood of the applicant having children in making a credit decision.
- Requesting information about a spouse: In most cases, a creditor cannot request information about an applicant's spouse or former spouse when the applicant is applying for individual credit and relying on their own income and assets.
- Failing to consider all income: A creditor must consider all reliable income reported by the applicant, including income from part-time employment, public assistance, alimony, child support, and retirement benefits. Discounting or refusing to consider income from these sources may violate the ECOA.
When a creditor denies a credit application, the ECOA requires the creditor to send an adverse action notice within 30 days under 15 U.S.C. § 1691(d) and Regulation B. The notice must contain the specific reasons for the denial or inform the applicant of the right to request those reasons within 60 days. Vague or generic reasons such as "does not meet our lending criteria" are insufficient. The creditor must state concrete reasons, such as "insufficient income," "high debt-to-income ratio," or "limited credit history." If the creditor used a credit score, it must also disclose the score and the key factors affecting it.
Your Rights
The ECOA and Regulation B provide consumers with significant protections in the credit application process:
- Right to be evaluated on merit: Your credit application must be evaluated based on your creditworthiness, not your race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, age, or receipt of public assistance.
- Right to apply for credit in your own name: You have the right to apply for credit individually, and the creditor cannot require a co-signer if you qualify on your own.
- Right to have all income considered: The creditor must consider all income you report, including part-time wages, public assistance, alimony, and retirement income, provided the income is reliable.
- Right to a specific reason for denial: If your application is denied, you are entitled to a specific explanation of why, either automatically or upon request within 60 days.
- Right to keep your own accounts: A creditor cannot require you to reapply, change the terms, or close an account solely because you changed your name, reached a certain age, retired, or changed your marital status.
- Right to credit history in your own name: If you are an authorized user or joint account holder, creditors must report the account history in your name as well as the primary account holder's name, upon request.
- Right to sue: You have a private right of action under 15 U.S.C. § 1691e to sue creditors that violate the ECOA, and you may recover actual damages, punitive damages, and attorney's fees.
Regulation B: The Implementing Rules
Regulation B (12 C.F.R. § 1002), issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, provides detailed rules implementing the ECOA. Regulation B specifies what information creditors may and may not request on applications, how creditors must evaluate applicants, and the specific content and timing of adverse action notices. Understanding Regulation B is essential to identifying ECOA violations, and our attorneys are well-versed in its requirements.
Damages Available
The ECOA's damages provision at 15 U.S.C. § 1691e provides robust remedies for consumers:
Individual Actions
- Actual damages: Compensation for all harm suffered as a result of the discrimination, including denial of credit, higher interest rates paid, lost business opportunities, emotional distress, and reputational harm. Actual damages can be substantial, particularly when discrimination results in the loss of a home purchase, business financing, or other significant credit opportunity.
- Punitive damages: Up to $10,000 per individual action, intended to punish the creditor for its discriminatory conduct and deter future violations
- Attorney's fees and costs: The prevailing consumer is entitled to reasonable attorney's fees and court costs
Class Actions
- Punitive damages: Up to the lesser of $500,000 or 1% of the creditor's net worth for the class as a whole
- Actual damages: Each class member may recover their individual actual damages
- Attorney's fees and costs: Recoverable for the class
Government Enforcement
In addition to private actions, the ECOA is enforced by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the Department of Justice (DOJ), and other federal agencies. Government enforcement actions can result in injunctive relief, restitution, and civil money penalties. Consumers who report ECOA violations to the CFPB may trigger enforcement investigations that benefit large groups of affected consumers.
Individual ECOA claims must be filed within two years of the date of the violation under 15 U.S.C. § 1691e(f). For government enforcement actions, the statute of limitations is five years. If you believe you have been subjected to credit discrimination, it is important to consult with an attorney promptly to preserve your rights.
How We Can Help
Rausa Russo Law, PLLC represents consumers who have been subjected to credit discrimination in violation of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act. Our attorneys understand both the overt and subtle forms that lending discrimination can take, and we know how to build cases that hold creditors accountable.
When you contact our firm, we will:
- Review your credit application and adverse action notice to identify potential ECOA violations, including improper inquiries, insufficient reasons for denial, and discriminatory terms
- Analyze the creditor's lending patterns where possible to determine whether the creditor's practices disproportionately affect protected classes
- Evaluate your creditworthiness objectively to determine whether you should have been approved or offered better terms based on your financial qualifications
- Identify all liable parties, including the creditor, loan officers, and any third parties involved in the credit decision
- Pursue litigation under the ECOA to recover actual damages, punitive damages up to $10,000, and attorney's fees
- Coordinate related claims under the Fair Housing Act, state human rights laws, and other applicable statutes to maximize your recovery
Because the ECOA includes a fee-shifting provision for attorney's fees, our representation in ECOA claims typically costs our clients nothing out of pocket. If we prevail, the creditor pays our fees.