2026 data Public-data reference. official source

Companies: Y

Companies starting with Y that appear in the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database, sorted by total complaint volume.

1.5K companies starting with "Y"

Showing 1.5K–1.5K of 1.5K

Company Complaints
your website doesnt work very well. Im trying to click the button about publishing this and Ive done it multiple times on a new XXXX and it doesnt want to click you need to fix it. Your your service is just as aggravating as Macys which is not unusual for a government entity. Sorry for the for the insult you deserve it. Ill keep dry. there is finally work.,Company has responded to the consumer and the CFPB and chooses not to provide a public response,CITIBANK 1
your website probably messed it up. And even if it didn't 1
your will 1
youre a bunch of parasites. 1
youre a bunch of XXXX. 1
youre given three choices : Option 1 If youre law enforcement calling about a subpoena. ; Option 2 If youre a bank calling to question a transfer to a XXXX cash card ; Option 3 If youre a bank calling to question an ACH transfer In addition 1
Youre giving me this persons addresswhat are you giving them about me? Another agent later informed me that the same security code had been issued to both me and the individual responsible for the fraud 1
youre late 1
youre responsible for the accrued interest on the unsubsidized loans. Unpaid interest may capitalize ( added to the principal balance ) at the end of the deferment period unless you choose to make interest payments during the deferment. Forbearance allows you to postpone payments if youre experiencing temporary financial hardship and are not eligible for a deferment. During forbearance 1
youre stuck. Maybe you should call HUD and see if they will accept the NCHAF Funds. 1
Yours Truly 1
Youve Failed all Three Times to Address Situation CFPB 3. Power of Attorney Paperwork Fraud Not I 1
YSA ARM LLC DBA Oxygen XL 137

About this letter-indexed view

This page lists every company beginning with the letter Y that appears in the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Consumer Complaint Database. The CFPB has accepted consumer complaints since 2011 and publishes them as a public dataset so consumers, journalists, and researchers can study patterns across the financial services industry. PlainComplaint mirrors that database and groups it by company so a single company page rolls up every complaint filed against that institution across every product, state, and complaint year.

Companies on this page are listed by name by default. You can switch the sort to "Most Complaints" to surface the highest-volume institutions starting with this letter, "Timely Response" to find companies with the strongest response track record, or "Most Recent" to see who has had complaints filed most recently. Each row links to a dedicated company page with year-over-year trends, the top complaint products, the issue categories driving volume, and a state-level breakdown showing where the company's customer base is filing the most reports.

How to interpret these numbers

Total complaint counts reflect raw volume — they do not control for a company's customer base size, market share, or product mix. A large nationwide bank can show six-figure complaint counts simply because it serves tens of millions of customers. A smaller regional lender with a low complaint count may still have a higher per-customer complaint rate. To compare companies fairly, look at "Timely Response %" alongside total volume: this measures the share of complaints the company answered within the CFPB's deadline. A high timely rate combined with a low consumer-disputed rate is a stronger signal of customer-service quality than raw count alone.

A complaint in this database is not a finding of wrongdoing. The CFPB does not verify the facts of each complaint before publishing it; complaints are consumer-submitted narratives. Companies have the opportunity to respond, dispute, or resolve each complaint, and many are resolved with monetary or non-monetary relief. The strength of the dataset is its scale — millions of records spanning every major U.S. consumer finance category — and its neutrality: it reports what consumers said happened, regardless of the company's perspective.

What you'll find on each company page

Each company detail page derives every statistic from the live PlainComplaint database. You'll see the company's total complaint volume since 2011, the timely-response rate, the breakdown by financial product (mortgages, credit cards, debt collection, credit reporting, and so on), the most common complaint issues filed against that company, the top states by complaint volume, and a year-over-year trend showing whether complaint volume is rising or falling. Where the database includes the company's most-recent assets or revenue, those values are shown so readers can compare complaint volume against firm size — context that raw counts alone cannot provide.

Companies are deduplicated where possible: subsidiaries are linked back to their parent organization, and shared identifiers from the CFPB are used to merge duplicate entries that appear under slightly different names. If you spot a company that should be merged with another, contact our editorial team — corrections are processed and reflected on the next dataset refresh.

Source & refresh cadence

All complaint records originate from the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database, downloaded from the agency's public data portal at consumerfinance.gov. We refresh the dataset on a regular cadence so the rankings, browse pages, and detail-page statistics stay aligned with the agency's latest public release. See the methodology page for the full data pipeline, deduplication rules, and refresh schedule. See the full company index for the alphabetical view across every letter, or jump to the rankings hub for live top-10 lists computed from the same database.

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