Another VC-backed fintech, Earnin, faces crackdown over allegedly ‘predatory’ loans

by | Nov 20, 2024 | Technology

The attorney general for the District of Columbia is suing instant payday loan fintech Earnin for “deceptively marketing and providing illegal high-interest loans,” the AG alleges.

Earnin allows its users to get loans against paychecks. It advertises that users can get $150 a day, up to $750 per pay period, with “no interest, credit check or ‘mandatory’ fees,” according to its website. But in order to get the money immediately, users are charged what it calls a “Lightning Speed” fee. Earnin then pays itself back by withdrawing the loan amount, plus any fees, from the customer’s bank account or debit card on the next payday, the lawsuit describes. 

Like most of the other fintechs in this category, Earnin says that the service is free if users don’t want their pre-payday loans immediately but are willing to wait up to a couple of business days for funds to transfer. The AG alleges that the fees Earnin collects are equivalent to an interest rate of 300% on average, which is “more than 12 times the District’s 24% interest rate cap,” it says. On top of that, the AG says that Earnin is operating in the District without proper licensing.

Earnin’s lawyer, Karl Racine, says that the AG’s “lawsuit demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding of how our product works and why so many DC residents benefit from it.” Racine argues that “DC workers who use our EWA product have the choice to access their earned money at no cost, in which case money is received within 1-2 business days.”

Earnin was a fintech darling back in 2018, when it raised $125 million from a host of big-name VCs including DST Global, Andreessen Horowitz, Spark Capital, Coatue, and Ribbit. 

Founder Ram Palaniappan has consistently positioned the service at those who were at least financially sufficient to wait for paydays — that is, people wh …

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