Title 15 › Chapter 41— CONSUMER CREDIT PROTECTION › Subchapter I— CONSUMER CREDIT COST DISCLOSURE › Part B— Credit Transactions › § 1650
Stops private lenders from buying special treatment from colleges. Lenders must not give schools gifts or share profits with them to get loan business. Lenders may not make students think a school endorses their loans by using the school’s name, logo, or symbols in ads. Financial aid staff or others who handle loans for a school may not accept things of value for serving on a lender’s advisory group, though they can be paid back for reasonable expenses. Lenders cannot charge a fee or penalty if a borrower pays off a private education loan early. Colleges must make public any contract they have with a credit card company. Credit card companies may not give students tangible gifts to get them to sign up for open-end credit on campus, near campus (as the Bureau defines), or at school events. Congress also recommends that schools limit where cards are marketed, tell the school where marketing will happen, and include credit-card and debt education in new-student orientation. For loans with cosigners, lenders cannot declare a student in default or speed up collection just because a cosigner dies or declares bankruptcy. If a student dies, the loan holder must, within a reasonable time, release any cosigner and tell other cosigners if someone is released. Lenders must offer students a way to name someone who can act for them about a loan if the student dies. Key terms (one line each): cosigner — a person who promises to pay for another without pay; covered educational institution — any postsecondary school or its staff; gift — items of more than small value, with some listed exceptions; institution of higher education — same as the Higher Education Act; postsecondary educational expenses — costs counted in a student’s cost of attendance; preferred lender arrangement — as defined in the Higher Education Act; private educational lender — a bank, credit union, or other entity that makes private education loans; private education loan — a non-federal loan for postsecondary costs; revenue sharing — when a school recommends a lender and the lender pays the school fees or shares profits.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 1650
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60