Millions of Americans have been overcharged, misled, or improperly treated by banks, credit card companies, debt collectors, and mortgage servicers. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) exists specifically to deal with this — and yet, most people have never filed a complaint with them.
That's a missed opportunity. Here's what the CFPB actually is, what it can do, and exactly how to use it.
What Is the CFPB?
The CFPB is a federal agency created by the Dodd-Frank Act in 2010. Its entire mandate is consumer financial protection — specifically, making sure banks, lenders, credit bureaus, debt collectors, and other financial companies follow the law when dealing with consumers.
The Bureau has the authority to:
- Supervise financial companies for compliance
- Enforce federal consumer financial laws
- Write and implement rules under 18 federal consumer laws
- Accept, process, and forward consumer complaints to companies
- Take enforcement actions that can result in companies refunding money to consumers
What You Can Complain About
The CFPB accepts complaints about a wide range of financial products and services:
- Bank accounts and overdraft fees
- Credit cards (billing errors, interest rate changes, late fees)
- Mortgages and home equity loans
- Student loans
- Auto loans and leases
- Debt collection practices
- Credit reporting errors
- Payday and personal loans
- Money transfers and prepaid cards
How the Complaint Process Actually Works
Filing a CFPB complaint is free, takes about 10 minutes, and can be done entirely online at consumerfinance.gov/complaint. Here's what happens after you file:
- The CFPB routes your complaint to the company within approximately 15 days
- The company is required to respond — typically within 15 days, with a full resolution within 60 days
- The CFPB publishes complaints in its public Consumer Complaint Database, which is visible to everyone
- You can review the company's response and provide feedback
Why companies respond: Having a CFPB complaint on record is something financial companies take seriously. It feeds into their regulatory examination record, and patterns of complaints can trigger formal CFPB investigations. Companies that would ignore a phone call often respond promptly to a formal CFPB complaint.
Maximising the Effectiveness of Your Complaint
A generic complaint ("my bank charged me a fee I didn't agree to") is less effective than a specific one that references the relevant regulation. Before filing a CFPB complaint, we recommend also sending a formal written dispute to the company itself — citing the specific rule you believe was violated — and giving them 15–30 days to respond. Then, if they don't respond or refuse to resolve the issue, mention in your CFPB complaint that you've already attempted direct resolution.
This approach demonstrates good faith, strengthens your complaint record, and gives the CFPB more detail to work with when they forward the complaint to the company.
The Complaint Database Is Public — Use It
One often-overlooked feature: the CFPB's complaint database is public and searchable. Before you dispute a fee or file a complaint, it's worth checking whether other consumers have had the same issue with the same company. Finding a pattern of similar complaints — and referencing it — adds further weight to your own dispute.
You can search the database at consumerfinance.gov/data-research/consumer-complaints.
When the CFPB Isn't the Right Channel
The CFPB is specifically for financial products and services. For medical billing disputes, use CMS or your state insurance commissioner. For airline issues, use the DOT. For general consumer fraud and deceptive practices, the FTC is the appropriate agency. ClawBack's dispute letters always identify the correct escalation agency based on the type of claim.