There are still compliance and regulatory developments emanating from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).

Weltman, Weinberg & Reis shareholder Matthew Young recapped in a blog post last week that the CFPB issued a final rule amending the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) and Regulation B, making “significant changes to how creditors evaluate fair lending compliance, applicant discouragement, and Special Purpose Credit Programs (SPCPs).”

Young mentioned the CFPB announced on April 22 that the rule becomes effective on July 21.

“Most notably, the CFPB removed the ‘disparate impact’ or ‘effects test’ standard from Regulation B, clarifying that ECOA does not recognize claims based solely on facially neutral practices that disproportionately affect protected groups absent discriminatory intent,” Young wrote. “The agency stated that only practices intentionally designed or applied to disadvantage protected classes may violate ECOA under the revised rule.

“The final rule also narrows Regulation B’s discouragement provisions,” he continued. “Moving forward, prohibited discouragement will apply only to oral or written statements directed at applicants or prospective applicants that would cause a reasonable person to believe they would be denied credit, or receive less favorable terms, because of a protected characteristic. The CFPB clarified that general business practices, including branch locations, advertising placement, or outreach efforts, generally will not constitute prohibited discouragement. However, marketing materials, advertisements, videos, and other visual content remain subject to review under the updated standards.

Young pointed out that the CFPB revised provisions governing SPCPs involving for-profit organizations.

“The rule prohibits certain programs from using race, color, national origin, or sex as eligibility criteria and imposes heightened documentation requirements demonstrating that participants would not otherwise qualify for credit absent the program. The changes do not materially alter existing SPCP requirements applicable to nonprofit organizations, including credit unions,” he wrote.

Young also mentioned the CFPB finalized the rule largely as proposed after reviewing approximately 64,500 public comments.

“Credit Unions should review current fair lending, compliance, and marketing practices to assess operational and compliance impacts before the July 2026 effective date,” he added.