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H.R. 941 House Commerce

Small LENDER Act

Introduced
Feb 4, 2025
Sponsor
Rep. Hill, J. French (R-AR-2)
View on Congress.gov (opens in a new tab)

STAGE 3 OF 8 — CALENDARS AND SCHEDULING

Currently in the House. Last action: placed on the union calendar, calendar no. 610 on Jun 18, 2026.

  1. House Introduced in House Feb 4, 2025
  2. House Referred to the House Committee on Financial Services. Feb 4, 2025
  3. House Committee Consideration and Mark-up Session Held Apr 21, 2026
  4. House Ordered to be Reported by the Yeas and Nays: 26 - 22. Apr 21, 2026
  5. House Reported (Amended) by the Committee on Financial Services. H. Rept. 119-702. Jun 18, 2026
  6. House Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 610. Jun 18, 2026

Cosponsors

16

Subjects

Banking and financial institutions regulationBusiness recordsData collection, sharing, protectionFinancial services and investmentsSmall business

Committees

  • Financial Services Committee
    • Reported By , Jun 18, 2026
    • Markup By , Apr 21, 2026
    • Referred To , Feb 4, 2025

Summary

Small Lenders Exempt from New Data and Excessive Reporting Act or the Small LENDER ActThis bill modifies the requirements for financial institutions to report certain information about small business credit applications to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and extends the timeline for compliance with the CFPB rule with respect to such reporting (i.e., Section 1071 final rule). (For background about the CFPB rule and subsequent litigation see CRS Report R47788.)Under the bill, the reporting requirements apply only to financial institutions that originate at least 500 credit transactions to small businesses in each of the preceding two years. The bill further defines small businesses as those with gross annual revenue of $1 million or less.The rule currently establishes a phase-in period that ultimately requires institutions that originate over 100 credit transactions to small businesses to comply with the reporting requirements. The rule also defines small businesses as those with gross annual revenue of $5 million or less.Further, beginning on the date the final CFPB rule was issued (May 31, 2023), the bill provides three years for applicable financial institutions to comply with the rule followed by a two-year safe harbor period during which such institutions are not subject to any penalties for failure to comply with the rule.

Summary as of: Introduced in House

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