Know Your Consumer Rights
American consumer protection law is one of the most robust in the world — and most Americans have no idea it exists. The Federal Trade Commission, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, state attorneys general, and a patchwork of federal and state statutes create layers of protection that corporations spend considerable money hoping you never discover.
The Foundation: Federal Consumer Protection
At the federal level, three agencies matter most:
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC) — Handles deceptive advertising, unfair business practices, identity theft, and Do Not Call violations. Filing an FTC complaint is free and, when aggregated with other complaints, directly triggers investigations and enforcement actions.
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) — Handles financial products and services: banks, credit cards, mortgages, student loans, debt collectors, payday lenders. The CFPB complaint portal is one of the most powerful tools an individual consumer has. Companies are legally required to respond to CFPB complaints.
- Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) — Handles product safety, defects, and recalls. When a product injured you, a CPSC report creates a paper trail for enforcement and class actions.
Your State Attorney General
Every state has a consumer protection division in the attorney general's office. State AGs have broad authority over in-state business practices and often move faster than federal agencies on local issues. Most have online complaint portals.
The Complaint Multiplier Effect
Individual complaints to regulators are not individually investigated. They're aggregated. When the CFPB receives 500 complaints about the same fee practice at the same bank, that's a pattern — and patterns trigger enforcement. Your complaint on its own may not get you immediate relief. Combined with others, it ends the practice.
File complaints even when you've already resolved your issue. The data matters.