The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau just told roughly 450 employees scattered across the country to pack their bags and report to Washington, D.C. The agency is shuttering regional offices in San Francisco, Atlanta, Chicago, and New York, centralizing all operations at its headquarters.

Remote work? That’s done too. Every employee will be required to show up in person once the relocations take effect later this year.

The CFPB was established in 2010 with a straightforward mandate: protect consumers in financial markets. It became the primary federal watchdog for everything from predatory lending to credit card fees. Under Acting Director Russell Vought, the agency’s trajectory shifted dramatically starting in early 2025.

Initial plans reportedly aimed at reducing staff by up to 90%. That number alone would have been unprecedented for a functioning federal agency. While those extreme cuts haven’t fully materialized, the cumulative effect of more than a year of downsizing pressure has been significant.

Staff resignations have steadily climbed as employees read the writing on the wall. Now, with the relocation mandate, the administration appears to be betting that a meaningful number of those 450 regional employees will simply choose to leave rather than uproot their lives.