Financial Services Listings

The listings within this directory organize credit and debt-related service providers, educational resources, and regulatory references into a structured format built for research and comparison. Coverage spans the full spectrum of credit solution categories recognized by federal oversight bodies including the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). Each entry is classified by service type, geographic availability, and applicable regulatory framework, giving researchers a consistent basis for comparison. Understanding how listings function — and how to interpret them alongside statutory references and educational content — is essential before drawing conclusions from any individual entry.


How to use listings alongside other resources

Listings in this directory are not self-contained decision tools. A listing entry identifies a provider or service category, but the substantive legal and regulatory context needed to evaluate that entry is housed in dedicated educational pages. For example, a listing for a debt management plan provider becomes significantly more useful when read alongside Debt Management Plans, which explains how these arrangements interact with the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (15 U.S.C. § 1692 et seq.) and creditor notification requirements.

Similarly, listings for credit counseling agencies carry more informational weight when cross-referenced with Accreditation Standards for Credit Services, which explains the role of bodies like the National Foundation for Credit Counseling (NFCC) and the Financial Counseling Association of America (FCAA) in setting minimum competency standards. The CFPB's supervisory authority over larger market participants — defined at 12 C.F.R. § 1090 as nonbank entities with more than $10 million in annual receipts from consumer debt relief — is another regulatory layer that affects how a listing entry should be interpreted.

Researchers examining provider licensing should cross-reference Credit Solution Provider Licensing, which maps state-level registration requirements, bonding thresholds, and fee caps that vary by jurisdiction.


How listings are organized

Entries are sorted into six primary classification tiers based on the nature of the service and the regulatory category to which it belongs:

  1. Credit counseling and education providers — Entities operating under nonprofit or NFCC-affiliated structures, subject to IRS 501(c)(3) requirements and CFPB supervisory examination.
  2. Debt management plan (DMP) administrators — Providers who negotiate structured repayment terms with creditors, distinct from debt settlement in that no principal reduction is sought.
  3. Debt settlement and negotiation firms — For-profit entities regulated under the FTC's Telemarketing Sales Rule (16 C.F.R. § 310), which prohibits advance fee collection before settlement of at least one enrolled debt.
  4. Debt consolidation lenders — Licensed lending institutions offering personal loans or balance transfer products as consolidation vehicles, subject to Truth in Lending Act (TILA) disclosures under Regulation Z.
  5. Bankruptcy petition preparers and legal aid resources — Entities providing procedural assistance within the scope of 11 U.S.C. (the Bankruptcy Code), listed separately from licensed attorneys.
  6. Specialty credit solution providers — Providers targeting specific debt categories, including Student Loan Debt Credit Solutions, Medical Debt Credit Solutions, Payday Loan Debt Solutions, and veteran-specific programs.

The distinction between for-profit and nonprofit service structures is a classification boundary with direct regulatory implications. That distinction is explored in depth at Nonprofit vs. For-Profit Credit Services.


What each listing covers

Each directory entry is built from a standardized field structure to enable direct comparison across providers. The core fields for every listing include:

The contrast between debt management plans and debt settlement is a decision boundary that appears frequently in listing interpretation. DMPs preserve the original principal and maintain creditor relationships, whereas settlement programs seek to resolve accounts for less than the full balance — an outcome that carries tax consequences under IRS Publication 4681 (Canceled Debts, Foreclosures, Repossessions, and Abandonments) and negative credit reporting implications as described at Impact of Credit Solutions on Credit Score.


Geographic distribution

Provider availability across the 50 states is uneven in ways that reflect differences in state-level credit services legislation. States including California (operating under the Credit Services Act, California Civil Code § 1789.10 et seq.), Texas, and Florida maintain distinct registration and bonding requirements that restrict which out-of-state providers can legally operate within their borders. A full mapping of those state-level regulatory frameworks is available at State Credit Services Regulations.

Listings are tagged with one of three geographic availability markers:

For researchers examining regional coverage gaps, the National Credit Statistics page provides CFPB and Federal Reserve data on consumer debt burdens by region, which contextualizes why provider density varies across states. Rural and lower-income markets historically show fewer licensed providers per capita, a distribution pattern documented in CFPB consumer financial protection reports.

The Financial Services Directory Purpose and Scope page provides additional context on how geographic filters are applied during the directory build process and how regulatory classification decisions are made when provider categories overlap.

📜 6 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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