CFPB Declares Early Wage Access Not 'Credit' Under Lending Laws
Published Date: 12/23/2025
Notice
Summary
The CFPB says earned wage access (EWA) products—tools that let workers get paid early—aren't considered credit under the Truth in Lending rules. This means certain fees like tips or fast delivery charges won’t count as finance charges. This change starts December 23, 2025, making it clearer and easier for workers and companies using EWA without extra credit rules or surprise costs.
Analyzed Economic Effects
3 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Covered EWA Is Not Credit
If you use an Earned Wage Access (EWA) product that meets the advisory opinion's "Covered EWA" rules, the CFPB says that product is not "credit" under Regulation Z starting December 23, 2025. Covered EWA must (1) not exceed the accrued cash value of wages determined by payroll data, (2) use a payroll-process deduction at the next payroll event, (3) contractually have no recourse or debt-collection or credit-reporting against the worker, and (4) not assess individual workers' credit risk.
Free EWA Providers Not Regulation Z Creditors
The CFPB explains that providers offering EWA products that are free of finance charges will, in the normal course, not be Regulation Z "creditors" and thus generally will not be subject to Regulation Z/TILA creditor obligations. This advisory opinion is effective December 23, 2025.
Expedited Fees and Tips Not Finance Charges
Starting December 23, 2025, the CFPB says that, in the normal course, fees for expedited delivery of earned wages and tips associated with EWA are not "finance charges" under Regulation Z because they are not imposed directly or indirectly by the creditor. The advisory opinion also notes that in certain factual scenarios those fees could still be finance charges.
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