The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau dismissed its pending lawsuit against SoLo Funds, a peer-to-peer lending company, on Friday.
The case was dismissed with prejudice, a permanent dismissal that cannot be brought back into court at a later time, according to a filing submitted to California’s Central District Court.
The CFPB originally filed a lawsuit against SoLo Funds in May 2024, alleging that the online platform was “
SoLo Funds, a Los Angeles-based, Black-owned fintech company, runs a lending platform on which members make small peer-to-peer loans
The agency alleged in the lawsuit’s initial press release that “while SoLo’s advertisements and loan disclosures market no-interest loans, virtually all borrowers pay ‘tips’ to the investor lenders, ‘donations’ to SoLo, or both.” These fees equate to an equivalent annual percentage rate of more than 36%, according to the CFPB.
“As a disruptive fintech leader and a certified benefit corporation, SoLo is proud to have over 2 million users that have injected $1 billion into working-class communities via its peer-to-peer community finance platform and we look forward to continuing this critical work now that this costly litigation is behind us,” SoLo CEO Travis Holoway said in a press release.
In a post shared Sunday on X, acting CFPB Director Russell Vought said in relation to the case against SoLo Funds that the CFPB “was wrong and we dismissed the case. More to come, but the weaponization of ‘consumer protection’ must end.”
Over the last four years, many working class Americans with limited means faced unexpected medical bills, auto repairs & higher grocery bills. One company set up an innovative solution by creating a platform to allow borrowers & lenders to connect for loans at no interest, with…
— Russ Vought (@russvought) February 23, 2025
Some consumer watchdog organizations see the dismissal as a negative consequence of
“We are now seeing what it means for the Trump administration to destroy the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau,” said Lauren Saunders, associate director at the National Consumer Law Center. “It is letting off scot-free a deceptive company that claimed 0% APR for payday loans of 400% APR or higher, with interest disguised in fake ‘tips’ and ‘donations’ that virtually everyone was forced to pay. States now have to pick up the pieces. No state should tolerate a company flagrantly deceiving borrowers and ignoring state rate caps and licensing laws. Several states have already run SoLo Funds out of town, and all of the others should as well.”
In 2023, SoLo Funds entered settlement agreements with regulators in California, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and the District of Columbia.
SoLo also entered into consent decrees with the states of