A free personal finance platform that provides users with credit scores, credit monitoring, and financial product recommendations such as credit cards and loans. The company monetizes by earning commissions when users are approved for financial products through their platform. Their policies are significant for consumers because they govern how sensitive financial data including credit information, spending patterns, and personal financial details are collected, used, and shared with third-party financial institutions.
High — provisions that significantly limit your legal rights, authorize broad data collection, or create material financial exposure. Medium — provisions worth knowing about but with partial protections or limited scope. Low — standard terms with minimal consumer impact.
This submission did not return Credit Karma's privacy policy document. The URL provided returned a website error page containing no policy text or operational content. The actual privacy policy document …
The URL submitted for analysis returned a 404 error page from Credit Karma rather than a terms of service document. The page contains only front-end JavaScript bundles, New Relic monitoring …
ConductAtlas tracks 2 Credit Karma documents including terms of service, privacy policy, and other governance documents. Every document is captured daily with cryptographic verification.
Credit Karma has made 3 policy changes in the past 12 months across the documents ConductAtlas tracks.
ConductAtlas has classified 1 provisions across Credit Karma's tracked documents. 0 are rated high severity, 0 medium, and 1 low.
Yes. Monitor subscribers ($19/month) can add Credit Karma to their watchlist and receive same-day email alerts whenever any tracked document changes.