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    Home»Loans»Earned wage access programs are simply not loan products
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    Earned wage access programs are simply not loan products

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    Earned wage access programs are simply not loan products
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    • Key insight: Every day, millions of American workers are caught in the same trap: Their bills are due before their paychecks arrive. Earned wage access solves this mismatch by letting workers access wages they have already earned on their own schedule, without interest, late fees or debt.
    • What’s at stake: Conflating EWA with payday lending does not protect consumers, it confuses the debate and threatens to take away an affordable critical financial option for working families.
    • Supporting data: A November 2025 study at the University of Oregon found that first-time EWA users saw their net monthly income increase by $334, an 11.5% gain. Users did not see increases in overdraft fees, interest charges or other bank fees.

    Every day, millions of American workers are caught in the same trap: Their bills are due before their paychecks arrive. It’s a simple mismatch with real consequences, including overdraft fees, missed payments and the kind of financial stress that follows you. Earned wage access exists to solve that mismatch by letting workers access wages they have already earned on their own schedule, without interest, late fees or debt.

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    A recent misguided BankThink column (“New earned wage access schemes are worsening the affordability crisis,” March 25, 2026) repeats a familiar but fundamentally flawed argument equating EWA with payday lending. This claim ignores the basic mechanics of both products. EWA does not charge interest. It does not charge late fees. It does not conduct credit checks, report to credit bureaus or engage in collection activity of any kind. Most importantly, EWA providers offer a no-cost option, meaning no mandatory origination or other fees are passed to consumers. These are not minor distinctions — they are the defining characteristics of lending, and EWA has none of them. Conflating these two products does not protect consumers, it confuses the debate and threatens to take away an affordable critical financial option for working families.

    Let’s look at what the evidence actually shows.

    A November 2025 study at the University of Oregon provided the first causal evidence on the impacts of direct-to-consumer EWA. The study found that first-time EWA users saw their net monthly income increase by $334, an 11.5% gain. Users did not see increases in overdraft fees, interest charges or other bank fees. And spending data showed that people accessed wages early to pay for essentials: rent, utilities, gasoline, prescriptions and credit card payments. This is not what a debt trap looks like; this is a financial tool helping workers smooth their cash flow and stay on their feet.

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau itself has issued an advisory opinion explicitly clarifying that covered EWA providers are not subject to the Truth in Lending Act. Nearly a dozen state legislatures have enacted bipartisan regulatory frameworks that recognize EWA as a distinct financial product, not a loan. While critics point to a handful of court cases as evidence to the contrary, those rulings involve specific company practices and fact patterns, not a blanket judicial determination about the entire EWA industry.

    Responsible EWA providers already meet high standards of consumer protection. These require a voluntary no-cost option for all users, clear and transparent fee disclosures, tip disclosures explicitly stating that tips are voluntary and may be zero, and allowing users to cancel at any time. The EWA industry is advocating for smart regulation that reflects the unique structure of this product, not a framework borrowed from traditional lending that was never designed for EWA.

    We have seen what happens when lawmakers take the latter approach. When the state of Connecticut wrongfully reclassified EWA as a small loan, most providers exited the state. Over 151,000 families and 1,300 businesses lost access to a service they had relied on. Those workers did not stop having financial emergencies, they were simply pushed toward the high-cost alternatives that consumer advocates claim to oppose, including payday loans and overdraft fees.

    Claims that EWA apps rely on “dark patterns” are entirely baseless when applied to responsible providers. Industry standards require a genuinely free option for every user, prohibit any misleading language around tips, and mandate full transparency at every step of the transaction. The real dark pattern is lobbying to eliminate a product workers chose freely, and leaving them with high-cost alternatives like payday loans instead.

    The column warns that proposed federal legislation would undermine state rate caps and the Military Lending Act. The American Fintech Council, or AFC, fully supports reasonable interest rate caps for loans, but this is beside the point: EWA providers do not charge interest, period. Applying APR calculations to a noncredit product is misleading at best. What federal legislation would actually accomplish is preventing the regulatory patchwork that leaves workers in some states with access to EWA and workers in others without it, based purely on where they happen to live.

    Further, neither existing state EWA bills nor the federal bill allow payday lenders to exploit broad loopholes in EWA rules. This argument is patently false, and countered by the fact that legislators carefully crafted how EWA is defined in statute to specifically make engagement in the market economically infeasible for payday lenders. Simply put, if a payday lender tried to offer EWA services as drafted in the legislation, they would either have to change their business model completely or violate the law.

    Critics point to a small increase in non-sufficient funds fees as evidence of harm. The Oregon study did find an increase in NSF fees, approximately $9 per month. But context matters. Weighed against a $334 monthly income increase, this is a modest cost that does not meaningfully reduce financial well-being.

    As CEO of an organization whose members collectively serve millions of workers across the country, I see the impact of EWA every day. And research from the Financial Health Network confirms what these workers already know: The vast majority of EWA users report a positive experience, and continued use improves their ability to pay bills on time. My time in the New York State Legislature taught me that good policy starts with listening to the people it affects. Workers who use EWA are telling us clearly that this product works for them.

    The debate around EWA regulation deserves seriousness and accuracy. American workers deserve better than having their financial options stripped away based on misleading comparisons. They deserve a regulatory framework that protects them while preserving their right to access their own money on their own terms.

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