Jump to content

Payscore

From Consumer_Action_Taskforce

Article Status Notice: This Article is a stub

Notice: This Article Requires Additional Expansion

This article is underdeveloped, and needs additional work to meet the wiki's Content Guidelines and be in line with our Mission Statement for comprehensive coverage of consumer protection issues. Issues may include:

  • This article needs to be expanded to provide meaningful information
  • This article requires additional verifiable evidence to demonstrate systemic impact
  • More documentation is needed to establish how this reflects broader consumer protection concerns
  • The connection between individual incidents and company-wide practices needs to be better established
  • The article is simply too short, and lacks sufficient content

How You Can Help:

  • Add documented examples with verifiable sources
  • Provide evidence of similar incidents affecting other consumers
  • Include relevant company policies or communications that demonstrate systemic practices
  • Link to credible reporting that covers these issues
  • Flesh out the article with relevant information

This notice will be removed once the article is sufficiently developed. Once you believe the article is ready to have its notice removed, visit the Discord (join here) and post to the #appeals channel, or mention its status on the article's talk page.

Editor's note:[edit | edit source]

This page may be taken down, when it was initially suggested

Payscore is a payment management platform founded initially as The Closing Docs by Sephen Arifin and Mark Fiebig in October 2017. Its advertised purpose is to verify the authenticity of renters.

Payscore
Basic information
Founded 2017
Type Private
Industry Payment management
Official website https://www.payscore.com/

Consumer-impact summary[edit | edit source]

User freedom: Often the usage of this service is mandatory for anyone renting or getting a loan.[1]

User privacy: Shares user info solely between consumers and renters as per section 3 of TOS.[2] However because of the mandatory requirement of sharing your bank credentials, the service may be sharing private transactions with landlords,[3][4] which may be sold.

When the company was formerly known as The Closing Docs, they were also selling "anonymized" user data.[5]

Business model: Property managers and lenders pay a fee to use their service to cover verifying rent.

Market control: Some competition, such as from Plaid and Yodlee.

Incidents[edit | edit source]

If the company page is short enough and/or the incident is not deserving of its own page, add incidents below in sub-sections (including the points outlined in the incident help page) without linking/creating an incident page.

If the company has various incidents listed and/or this page is getting too long, create subsections linking to each incident while linking to the main article and including a short summary. To link to the page use the "Hatnote" or "Main" templates.

If the company has numerous incidents then format them in a table (see Amazon for an example).


Add your text below this box. Once this section is complete, delete this box by clicking on it and pressing backspace.

This is a list of all consumer-protection incidents this company is involved in. Any incidents not mentioned here can be found in the Payscore category.

Selling user data[edit | edit source]

When the company was formerly known as The Closing Docs, they were selling "anonymized" user data.[5]

Example incident two (date)[edit | edit source]

...

See also[edit | edit source]

Link to relevant theme articles or companies with similar incidents.


Add your text below this box. Once this section is complete, delete this box by clicking on it and pressing backspace.

References[edit | edit source]

  1. u/Competitive-Mud-4898 (May 31, 2024). "Property management and income verification". Reddit. Retrieved Mar 22, 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. Payscore. "Terms of Service". Payscore. Archived from the original on Mar 24, 2025. Retrieved Mar 24, 2025.
  3. u/peachblueberrymuffin (Jun 5, 2023). "Is pay score legit?". Reddit. Retrieved Mar 24, 2025.
  4. u/sividis (Jun 10, 2024). "Apartments now require access to Bank accounts?". Reddit. Retrieved Mar 22, 2025.
  5. Jump up to: 5.0 5.1 u/missile_lily (Jan 10, 2023). "Landlords using service that requests and resells entire financial records". Reddit. Retrieved Mar 22, 2025.