Browse Companies

Explore all 145.5K companies with CFPB consumer complaints

Company Complaints
Alliance One, Inc. 880
Alliance Recovery Group 18
Alliant Capital Management LLC 320
Alliant Cooperative Data Solutions 4
ALLIANT CREDIT UNION 1.0K
Alliant hasnt told me the truth 1
Allied Account Services 1
Allied Account Services, Inc. 40
Allied California 1
Allied Capital Management, Inc. 6
Allied Collection Service, Inc. (Indiana) 23
Allied Collection Services, Inc. (Nevada) 740
Allied Consulting Services LLC 18
Allied Data Corporation 6
Allied Enrollment Centers LLC 4
Allied Fidelity Services, LLC 5
Allied Financial Group & Associates (Closed) 11
Allied Financial Services Inc 13
Allied International Credit Corp., (US) 193
ALLIED MORTGAGE GROUP 38
ALLIED NATIONAL INC 2
Allied Recovery Solutions, Inc. 10
ALLIED SECURITY LLC 3
Allied Servicing Corporation 14
Allied Union Group Inc 3
Allies for Community Business 8
Allison L. Friedman, P.A. 3
ALLOCATED BUSINESS MANAGEMENT LLC 2
allonges 2
allonges and endorsements because its never had it in possession. Instead 1
allonges? If yes please provide corporate resolution redacting her signing power.,Company has responded to the consumer and the CFPB and chooses not to provide a public response,SUNTRUST BANKS 1
ALLOT OF FRAUDULENT DEALINGS AND ITS RUINING MANY GOOD PEOPLE WHO DONT DESERVE THIS TREATMENT. THIS IS HOW YOU LOOSE TRUST! 1
allow that original debt to remain unchanged. The benefit operates in a benefit or set off and that means the accounting must be offset 1
allowed 1
Allowed AmXXXX {$25.00} 1
allowed its employees under the supervision of XXXX XXXX to reverse the ACH transaction for reasons that impermissible reasons that XXXX does not allow : XXXX allows transactions to be reversed for the following reasons : 1 ) Incorrect payment information ; 2 ) If the payment amount 1
allowed to open another account type 1
allowing 10 business days for a response. As of today 1
allowing a merchant to retain both a {$530.00} payment and the physical inventory. 1
allowing dealerships to lease and sell a vehicle with a known defect without disclosure.,,EQUIFAX 1
allowing dealerships to lease and sell a vehicle with a known defect without disclosure.,Company has responded to the consumer and the CFPB and chooses not to provide a public response,Experian Information Solutions Inc.,NC,285XX,Servicemember,Consent provided,Web,2025-04-23,Closed with explanation,Yes,N/A,13137552 1
allowing for no deviations. Consequently 1
allowing interest to accrue unnecessarily on higher balances.,,Nelnet 1
allowing me the chance to rebuild my financial standing on accurate and truthful grounds. 2
allowing me to deposit the check through the banking application. 1
allowing me to make payments successfully. 4
allowing me to manage it independently moving forward. 1
allowing me to seek state-level remedies 3
allowing mold to grow in the house and removing doors which offer a secondary protection against intruders. 1
allowing over 5 years of capitalization was catastrophic to my financial future. I believe this practice was designed to benefit the servicer at my expense 1

What this index shows

This is the master index of every company that appears in the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Consumer Complaint Database, mirrored on PlainComplaint and grouped by institution so a single company page rolls up every complaint filed against that company across every product, state, and year since 2011. The CFPB began collecting consumer complaints when it was established under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 and has published them as a public dataset to give consumers, researchers, and journalists a window into how U.S. financial-services firms respond to customer concerns.

The default view is alphabetical by company name and paginated 50 companies per page. Use the sort controls to re-order by total complaint volume (highest first), timely-response percentage (best response track record first), or most recent complaint activity (companies with the freshest reports). Each row links to a dedicated company page showing year-over-year complaint trends, the top complaint products, complaint issues, top states by volume, and a year-by-year breakdown of complaint counts and response timeliness.

How to compare companies fairly

Raw complaint volume is a function of two things: how many customers the company serves, and how it handles those customers. A nationwide bank with tens of millions of accounts can show six-figure complaint counts simply because of its scale; a smaller regional lender with a few hundred complaints may actually have a higher per-customer complaint rate. The "Timely Response %" column shows the share of complaints the company answered within the CFPB's deadline — a stronger comparable metric across firms of different sizes. Pair it with the volume column to form a fuller picture, and dig into the company page for the breakdown by product so you can see whether issues are concentrated in a single line of business (for example, credit reporting) or spread across the entire firm.

Complaint records are consumer-submitted narratives. The CFPB does not adjudicate or verify the facts in each report before publishing; companies are given the opportunity to respond, dispute, or resolve. Many complaints are resolved with monetary or non-monetary relief. The strength of the dataset is in its scale — millions of records spanning every major U.S. consumer financial category — and its neutrality: it reports what consumers said, regardless of the company's perspective. Treat individual records accordingly, and lean on aggregate patterns (top issues, year-over-year trends, state distribution) when drawing conclusions.

What the dataset covers

The CFPB Consumer Complaint Database covers complaints against banks, credit-card issuers, mortgage servicers, debt collectors, payday lenders, student-loan servicers, money-transfer companies, prepaid-card issuers, credit bureaus, auto-finance lenders, and other financial products and services regulated by the agency. Complaints are categorized by product (the broad financial-services category) and sub-product, and again by issue (the specific consumer concern, e.g. "incorrect information on your report") and sub-issue. Year-by-year coverage runs from 2011 to present, with monthly refreshes published by the CFPB.

PlainComplaint refreshes from the agency's public release on a regular cadence and re-derives all aggregate counts, rankings, and trend lines on each refresh, so the page you're reading reflects the latest snapshot of the public database. See the methodology page for the full data pipeline, dedup rules, and the refresh schedule, or browse by other dimensions: issues, products, or states.