Consumer
Credit, Creditors & Credit Bureaus
Equal
Credit Opportunity Act - Your Credit Rights
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Equal
Credit Opportunity Act, Creditors & Credit Bureaus
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Credit is used by millions of
consumers to finance an education or a house, remodel a
home, or get a small business loan.
The Equal Credit
Opportunity Act (ECOA) ensures that all consumers are
given an equal chance to obtain credit. This doesnt
mean all consumers who apply for credit get it: Factors
such as income, expenses, debt, and credit history are
considerations for creditworthiness.
The law protects you when
you deal with any creditor who regularly extends credit,
including banks, small loan and finance companies, retail
and department stores, credit card companies, and credit
unions. Anyone involved in granting credit, such as real
estate brokers who arrange financing, is covered by the
law. Businesses applying for credit also are protected by
the law.
When You Apply For
Credit, A Creditor May Not...
- Discourage
you from applying because of your sex, marital
status, age, race, national origin, or because
you receive public assistance income.
- Ask you to reveal
your sex, race, national origin, or religion. A
creditor may ask you to voluntarily disclose this
information (except for religion) if youre
applying for a real estate loan. This information
helps federal agencies enforce
anti-discrimination laws. You may be asked about
your residence or immigration status.
- Ask if youre
widowed or divorced. When permitted to ask
marital status, a creditor may only use the
terms: married, unmarried, or separated.
- Ask about your
marital status if youre applying for a
separate, unsecured account. A creditor may ask
you to provide this information if you live in
"community property" states: Arizona,
California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico,
Texas, and Washington. A creditor in any state
may ask for this information if you apply for a
joint account or one secured by property.
- Request information
about your spouse, except when your spouse is
applying with you; your spouse will be allowed to
use the account; you are relying on your
spouses income or on alimony or child
support income from a former spouse; or if you
reside in a community property state.
- Inquire about your
plans for having or raising children.
- Ask if you receive
alimony, child support, or separate maintenance
payments, unless youre first told
that you dont have to provide this
information if you wont rely on these
payments to get credit. A creditor may ask if you
have to pay alimony, child support, or separate
maintenance payments.
When Deciding To Give
You Credit, A Creditor May Not...
- Consider your sex,
marital status, race, national origin, or
religion.
- Consider whether you
have a telephone listing in your name. A creditor
may consider whether you have a phone.
- Consider the race of
people in the neighborhood where you want to buy,
refinance or improve a house with borrowed money.
- Consider your age,
unless:
- youre
too young to sign contracts, generally
younger than 18 years of age;
- youre
62 or older, and the creditor will favor
you because of your age;
- its
used to determine the meaning of other
factors important to creditworthiness.
For example, a creditor could use your
age to determine if your income might
drop because youre about to retire;
- its
used in a valid scoring system that
favors applicants age 62 and older. A
credit-scoring system assigns points to
answers you provide to credit application
questions. For example, your length of
employment might be scored differently
depending on your age.
When Evaluating Your
Income, A Creditor May Not...
- Refuse to
consider public assistance income the same way as
other income.
- Discount
income because of your sex or marital status. For
example, a creditor cannot count a mans
salary at 100 percent and a womans at 75
percent. A creditor may not assume a woman of
childbearing age will stop working to raise
children.
- Discount or
refuse to consider income because it comes from
part-time employment or pension, annuity, or
retirement benefits programs.
- Refuse to
consider regular alimony, child support, or
separate maintenance payments. A creditor may ask
you to prove you have received this income
consistently.
You Also Have The
Right To...
- Have credit
in your birth name (Mary Smith), your first and
your spouses last name (Mary Jones), or
your first name and a combined last name (Mary
Smith-Jones).
- Get credit
without a cosigner, if you meet the
creditors standards.
- Have a
cosigner other than your husband or wife, if one
is necessary.
- Keep your
own accounts after you change your name, marital
status, reach a certain age, or retire, unless
the creditor has evidence that youre not
willing or able to pay.
- Know
whether your application was accepted or rejected
within 30 days of filing a complete application.
- Know why
your application was rejected. The creditor must
give you a notice that tells you either the
specific reasons for your rejection or your right
to learn the reasons if you ask within 60 days.
- Acceptable
reasons include: "Your income was low,"
or "You havent been employed long
enough." Unacceptable reasons are: "You
didnt meet our minimum standards," or
"You didnt receive enough points on
our credit-scoring system." Indefinite and
vague reasons are illegal, so ask the creditor to
be specific.
- Find out
why you were offered less favorable terms than
you applied forunless you accept the terms.
Ask for details. Examples of less favorable terms
include higher finance charges or less money than
you requested.
- Find out
why your account was closed or why the terms of
the account were made less favorable unless the
account was inactive or delinquent.
A Special Note To
Women
A good credit
historya record of how you paid past
billsoften is necessary to get credit.
Unfortunately, this hurts many married, separated,
divorced, and widowed women. There are two common reasons
women dont have credit histories in their own
names: they lost their credit histories when they married
and changed their names; or creditors reported accounts
shared by married couples in the husbands name
only.
If youre
married, divorced, separated, or widowed, contact your
local credit bureau(s) to make sure all relevant
information is in a file under your own name.
If You Suspect
Discrimination...
- Complain to
the creditor. Make it known youre aware of
the law. The creditor may find an error or
reverse the decision.
- Check with
your state Attorney General to see if the
creditor violated state equal credit opportunity
laws. Your state may decide to prosecute the
creditor.
- Bring a
case in federal district court. If you win, you
can recover damages, including punative damages.
You also can obtain compensation for
attorneys fees and court costs. An attorney
can advise you on how to proceed.
- Join with
others and file a class action suit. You may
recover punitive damages for the group of up to
$500,000 or one percent of the creditors
net worth, whichever is less.
- Report
violations to the appropriate government agency.
If youre denied credit, the creditor must
give you the name and address of the agency to
contact.
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