Block's $45 million multistate settlement over Cash App fraud failures marks the latest regulatory blow to Jack Dorsey's fintech, as state attorneys general fill the enforcement void left by a weakened CFPB.
Block agreed to pay $45 million to 46 U.S. states to resolve claims that Cash App, its peer-to-peer payments app with 59 million active users, failed to adequately protect consumers from fraud and misled customers about the safety of their funds, according to a New York State court filing.
"Cash App misrepresented that it had the security of a traditional bank and misled customers that their balances were FDIC-insured," the filing said. The company also failed to have effective fraud-prevention procedures and neglected to investigate consumers' reports of unauthorized transactions, the states alleged. Cash App did not have an active customer-support phone number until 2021 — before then, a published number merely played a prerecorded message directing users to the app.
The investigation was led by Texas and Oregon. Texas will receive $5 million of the settlement, Oregon $3 million and New York $1.6 million, with the remainder divided among the other states. South Dakota, for example, will collect about $410,000. The settlement does not resolve a separate pending case brought by New York Attorney General Letitia James against Zelle operator Early Warning Services, which accuses the bank-owned payments network of allowing fraud to proliferate. Todd Baker, a financial services consultant and senior fellow at Columbia University, said the Cash App settlement makes a negotiated resolution in the Zelle case more likely because "the basic allegations around fraud risk disclosure and fraud prevention are similar."
The $45 million penalty adds to a growing stack of regulatory costs for Block. In January 2025, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau ordered Block to pay up to $120 million over similar fraud and compliance failures — an order that remained intact even as the Trump Administration dismissed many other CFPB enforcement actions from the Biden era. Last year, Block paid $80 million to multiple states and $40 million to the New York Department of Financial Services for anti-money-laundering failures. A 2021 Forbes investigation found that rental car companies and other fintechs had blocked Cash App transactions due to high fraud rates, with one fintech CEO describing Cash App's business-to-business fraud support as "almost non-existent."
As part of the settlement, Block committed to implementing a comprehensive compliance management system, providing live phone support for at least 13.5 hours per day, and responding to consumer complaints of unauthorized transactions within three business days. The company did not admit wrongdoing, saying it agreed to the judgment "solely for the purpose of concluding this matter." A Block spokesperson said the agreement relates to "a previously disclosed legacy matter" and noted that Cash App has made "significant investments in consumer protection, customer service, and compliance."
Block shares face headwinds from the cumulative regulatory scrutiny. The $45 million penalty, while manageable for a company with $25 billion in annual revenue, signals elevated compliance risk across Cash App, which generated roughly $5.5 billion in gross profit last year. With 46 states now party to enforcement actions and the CFPB order still in force, Block's cost of compliance is likely to rise further, potentially pressuring margins in its highest-volume business. The Zelle case in New York will be closely watched as a bellwether for how aggressively states pursue payments firms in the absence of federal oversight.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.