On May 16, Vermont Governor Phil Scott signed into law S. 27, a medical debt relief measure that prohibits the inclusion of medical debt on consumer credit reports and establishes a state-funded initiative to abolish qualifying medical debt held by Vermont residents.

Under the new law, scheduled to take effect on July 1, 2025, the State Treasurer is authorized to contract with a nonprofit entity to purchases and eliminate medical debts owed by Vermont residents. The legislation appropriates $1 million in FY2026 to support this effort. In addition to abolishing the debts, the contracted nonprofit must coordinate with credit reporting agencies to remove adverse credit information associated with the debt and provide written notice to affected individuals.

To be eligible, debtors must either have household income at or below 400% of the federal poverty level or owe medical debt amounting to at least 5% of their household income. Additionally, the debt must remain outstanding after standard collection efforts have concluded.

The legislation also introduces permanent changes to Vermont’s consumer credit reporting framework, including:

Putting It Into Practice: Vermont’s new law barring the inclusion of medical debt on credit reports follows the CFPB’s recent repeal of its own rule that would have imposed similar restrictions at the federal level (previously discussed here). While the CFPB continues to roll back rules and guidance issued under prior administrations (a trend we previously discussed here), states are increasingly stepping in to fill the void by expanding consumer protection measures (previously discussed here, and here). Credit reporting agencies and debt collectors should actively monitor state credit reporting laws to ensure continued compliance as regulatory frameworks evolve. 

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