CFPB Finds Card Act Reduced Penalty Fees And Made Credit Card Costs Clearer

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) today released a report detailing how the Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009 (CARD Act) reduced penalty fees and made the cost of credit cards clearer to consumers. The report found that total cost of credit declined by two percentage points between 2008 and 2012 but that there are still areas of concern in the credit card market.

“Credit cards play a valuable role in the everyday lives of American consumers,” said CFPB Director Richard Cordray. “The CARD Act brought better consumer protections and fairness to the marketplace, but we found there is more work to be done.”

The CARD Act was signed into law in May 2009 with the intent of establishing fair and transparent practices in the credit card market. Over seventy percent of adults have at least one credit card. The CARD Act made sweeping changes to protect them, including by preventing unexpected interest rate hikes, curbing unfair or excessive late fees, and creating an opt-in requirement for overlimit fees. The CARD Act also instituted new disclosure requirements designed to make credit card costs clearer for consumers. The CFPB assumed authority for the CARD Act in July 2011.

The CARD Act directs the CFPB to review the impact of the law on the cost and availability of credit as well as the level of consumer protections in the credit card market. A major takeaway from the report is that consumers can better understand the credit card market. They can comparison shop more easily because pricing is more predictable and transparent.

The CFPB used data covering most of the credit card marketplace to prepare the report. Based on this data, the report found that:

Consumers have responded positively to these market-wide changes. When JD Power & Associates released its 2013 U.S. Credit Card Satisfaction Study, it showed credit card satisfaction at an all-time high since the inception of the study in 2007. The study reported that customers seemed to be increasingly happy with their credit cards, and JD Power attributed some increased satisfaction to the CARD Act.

While the CARD Act addressed many problematic practices in the market, the CFPB has outstanding areas of concern from today’s report, including: