First Enforcement Action Announced for Remittance Transfer Rule Violation

WASHINGTON—The CFPB has announced its first-ever enforcement action based on violations of its Remittance Transfer Rule, hitting Maxitransfers Corp. with a $500,000 fine.

Maxitransfers Corp. (Maxi) provides remittance transfer services from more than 1,600 third-party locations in the U.S., such as grocery stores and pharmacies, to over 19,500 payment locations in Mexico, Central and South America. The company is headquartered in Irving, Texas. From October 2013 until May 2017, Maxi sent approximately 14.5 million remittance transfers for consumers in the U.S. For each transfer, Maxi was required to provide consumer protection disclosures and to comply with other requirements of EFTA and the Remittance Transfer Rule, the agency said.

According to the consent order, the Bureau found Maxi violated the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010 (CFPA) by stating to consumers it would not be responsible for errors made by its third-party payment agents when in fact the Remittance Transfer Rule makes Maxi responsible for the acts of the agent when the agent acts for the provider. The Bureau also found that Maxi violated EFTA and the Remittance Transfer Rule by using inaccurate language in disclosures and failing to maintain required policies and procedures to comply with error resolution procedures, the CFPB said. 

Terms of Agreement

Under the terms of the consent order, Maxi must pay a civil money penalty of $500,000, must refrain from violating the CFPA by stating that it is not responsible for the acts of its agents, and must take steps to improve its compliance management to prevent future violations of the CFPA, EFTA, and Remittance Transfer Rule.

The consent order is available at here.

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Word Count: 332
Copyright Holder: CUToday.info
Copyright Year: 2026
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URL: https://cuto-admin.flux5.ccplatform.net/Fresh-Today/First-Enforcement-Action-Announced-for-Remittance-Transfer-Rule-Violation