Medical Bills Don’t Belong on Your Credit Report

Imagine getting penalized on your credit report for getting cancer, breaking a leg, or just walking into an emergency room.

That’s not a hypothetical. It’s the reality for millions of Americans saddled with medical bills they didn’t plan for, understand, or even owe in many cases — only to see their credit scores plummet as a result.

Thankfully, this past January, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) stepped in to prohibit medical debt on credit reports. This rule was a win for fairness, accuracy, and basic human decency. But that progress is in jeopardy from industry lawsuits, congressional attacks, and the new administration’s all-out assault on the agency.

The Trump-appointed leadership of the CFPB and the lobby group for credit bureaus, the Consumer Data Industry Association, just asked a federal judge to vacate the medical debt rule. The Trump administration is siding with the credit bureaus, effectively asking the court to strike down the very protections the CFPB once championed.

At risk are financial protections for 15 million impacted people in the United States, which could unravel before they’ve even taken hold.

Medical debt has zero value for predicting whether someone will pay their debts — which is the whole point of a credit score! That’s a fact backed by the CFPB’s own research. Including it on credit reports doesn’t help lenders assess risk — it simply punishes people for being sick, hospitalized, or denied insurance coverage.

That’s why the CFPB’s medical debt proposal banned credit bureaus from weaponizing hospital bills against people who rely on credit scores to rent apartments, find jobs, or buy cars. But now, the Trump-led CFPB is potentially opening the door for corporate giants, and their allies in Congress, to undo this progress.

They’re eager to overturn the medical debt rule because flawed, fear-inducing data is profitable. Debt collectors depend on medical debt to pressure people into paying bills they may not actually owe. Credit bureaus profit by selling these scores to landlords, lenders, and employers.

According to recent research from the CFPB, at least 15 million people in the United States have a total of $49 billion in medical debt in collections on their reports. People with medical debt are far more likely to forgo necessary medical care. This disproportionately burdens Black and brown communities, Southern rural families, and the chronically ill. They aren’t irresponsible borrowers — they’re victims of a broken health care system and a rigged financial one.

Even after it’s paid off, problems with medical debt can haunt your credit report for years like a financial ghost, hurting your chances to get ahead long after you’ve paid the price.

Some states — like OregonCalifornia, and New Jersey — have limited medical debt on credit reports. But we can’t rely on patchwork laws. We need strong, national standards. And we need a CFPB that doesn’t flinch in its determination to protect consumers.

Credit scores wield enormous power over people’s lives, but most of us don’t understand them — until it’s too late. Behind that three-digit number is a web of private companies and political decisions. If we don’t fix the system, we’ll reinforce inequality in invisible but deeply unfair ways.

The CFPB was right to act. Now, it must stand its ground. We all must demand that medical debt stay off credit reports — for good. Because no one should have to choose between getting medical treatment and getting wrecked by the financial system.

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