New York Department of Financial Services Issues Regulations Regarding Commercial Finance Disclosures


The State of New York passed a law in December 2020 – the Commercial Finance Disclosure Law (“CFDL”), with an effective date of June 2021 – that prescribed required disclosures for commercial finance transactions that are $2,500,000 or less. The required disclosures are similar in style to those required for consumer financial services, but have specifics that are quite different from the federal Truth In Lending Act (“TILA”). Accordingly, the New York Department of Financial Services (“NY DFS”)  finally published regulations implementing the law. In particular, the regulations clarified the available exemptions from the law’s requirements, which include:

In addition, if the transaction is covered by TILA, then the CFDL does not apply. Importantly, however, the NY DFS did not extend that exemption to cover commercial transactions that provide TILA-compliant disclosures, which has been a popular strategy for small business lenders to appease the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Federal Trade Commission.

When the CFDL does apply to a commercial finance transaction, the breadth of the CFDL is quite broad – drawing in not just closed-end and open-end transactions but also sales-based financing and factoring transactions.


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National Law Review, Volume XIII, Number 59