Short answer: In April 2026 the CFPB finalized a rule narrowing Regulation B (ECOA) to intentional discrimination only, eliminating disparate-impact enforcement under ECOA effective July 21, 2026. That does not mean fair-lending risk disappeared. Disparate-impact claims under the Fair Housing Act are still alive and still enforced by the DOJ and HUD. So the exposure didn’t go away, it shifted, and most loan officers haven’t been told the difference.
What changed, and what didn’t
| What changed | What stayed the same |
|---|---|
| ECOA / Reg B disparate-impact enforcement eliminated by the CFPB (effective July 21, 2026) | Fair Housing Act disparate-impact claims remain, enforced by DOJ and HUD |
| ECOA now focuses on intentional discrimination | Intentional discrimination is still fully prohibited under ECOA and FHA |
| One enforcement avenue narrowed | Your documentation and consistent-treatment obligations are unchanged in practice |
What it means for loan officers in practice
If you were already treating applicants consistently and documenting your decisions, very little changes day to day. What changes is the enforcement landscape: a borrower or regulator pursuing a disparate-impact theory now has fewer paths under ECOA but the same path under the Fair Housing Act. The practical takeaway is unchanged, consistent process and a clean paper trail are still your protection. The riskiest setup is informal, undocumented decisions stored in one person’s head.
Why most content on this is already wrong
A lot of fair-lending content online predates the April 2026 rule and either ignores the change or overstates it as “disparate impact is gone.” Both are wrong. The accurate position: ECOA narrowed, Fair Housing Act unchanged. Knowing the difference is the point.
How a CRM keeps your fair-lending trail clean
The defensible position in any fair-lending question is consistent treatment you can prove. A mortgage CRM that timestamps communication, standardizes your follow-up process, and keeps decisions out of individual inboxes turns “we treated everyone the same” from a claim into a record. That’s the same all-in-one mortgage CRM discipline that protects you on TCPA and trigger-lead compliance too.
FAQ
Did the CFPB eliminate disparate impact?
Only under ECOA / Regulation B, effective July 21, 2026. Disparate-impact claims remain under the Fair Housing Act, enforced by DOJ and HUD.
Does this reduce fair-lending risk for loan officers?
It narrows one enforcement path. Consistent treatment and documentation remain essential.
This is general information, not legal advice. Confirm your compliance approach with counsel.
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