Pub. 14 2024 2025 Issue 1

AA card is either a credit card or a debit card. What about a home equity line of credit (HELOC) access card? Is that a credit card or a debit card? Or something in between? If it’s in between, does Regulation E apply? Regulation Z? It is easy to talk yourself in circles, but let’s make sense of it once and for all. To begin, why is this a conversation worth having in the first place? You may know the answer to this question and think this was a compliance officer’s version of child’s play. A card’s definition as a debit or credit card has worthwhile implications. It dictates what disclosures are necessary. In the vast alphabet soup of regulations, each has its onerous disclosure requirements, and Regulations E and Z (the two that apply in these areas) have plenty of requirements. Furthermore, it dictates how errors are resolved. Regulation E’s error dispute rules are highly consumer-favorable; not that Regulation Z’s aren’t, but Regulation E has a more formal investigation requirement. These formalities would apply if Regulation E applied to the HELOC’s access card transaction. We could go on and on about what each regulation independently entails, but let’s get back to cards. Debit and credit cards look similar, but there are fundamental differences. A debit card takes funds out of your bank account, while a credit card is linked to a credit line that you pay back later. A HELOC access card blurs the lines. With a HELOC, you may have an account with funds that seem identical to any other asset account. You have to pay those funds back at a later date. So, what exactly is a HELOC access card? To decipher this mystery, let’s look at the regulation. For the regulatory definition of a credit card, we turn to Regulation Z: “(i) Credit card means any card, plate, or other single credit device that may be used occasionally to obtain credit.” This includes HELOC access cards, which may be used to obtain credit from a line of credit. Regulation commentary further supports this point. “i. Examples of credit cards include ... A card that guarantees checks or similar instruments, if the asset account is also tied to an overdraft line or if the instrument directly accesses a line of credit.” When Is a Card a Card? By Roger Morris Jr., JD, CIPP, Associate General Counsel, Compliance Alliance Colorado Banker 12

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTg3NDExNQ==