News

The Fair Credit Billing Act is a 1974 federal law enacted to protect consumers from unfair credit billing practices. It enables individuals to dispute unauthorized charges on their accounts and ...
Credit card consumers have a number of different rights and protections afforded to them, many of which are laid out in the Fair Credit Billing Act. The law has been around since 1974 — longer ...
The Fair Credit Billing Act is not nearly as well-known to creditors and their counsel as its "fair credit" brother, the Fair Credit Reporting Act. But the FCBA is becoming increasingly popular ...
The Fair Credit Billing Act provides a timeframe for resolving credit card disputes. This timeframe includes sending a letter to the issuer within 60 days and the issuer resolving the issue within ...
The genesis of these protections is the federal Fair Credit Billing Act, which protects you from fraud by requiring credit card companies—not consumers—to deal with fraudulent charges.
Customers have the right to dispute errors under the Fair Credit Billing Act. Customers should make sure they are not mistaken about the billing error and should ...
The Act regulates how service providers bill consumers upon the termination of service agreements or contracts. It sets forth specific guidelines to ensure fair billing practices when consumers ...
New York lawmakers introduce the FAIR Business Practices Act to fight predatory lending, junk fees, deceptive AI use, and protect consumers statewide.
1869 - SITE Act - To amend title XVIII of the Social Security Act and title XXVII of the Public Health Service Act to ensure fair billing practice for items and services furnished by off-campus ...
When this happens, the law has your back. The federal Fair Credit Billing Act has outlined the rules for disputing charges to help get your money back. Here's how the dispute process works ...