SCHUFA Holding AG – Court Ruling (Germany, 2022)

Court Ruling
DPA LGKiel3 June 2022Germany
final
Court Ruling

General GDPR enforcement action

This case relates to broader data protection obligations, not specifically to cookie or consent banner compliance. It is not included in cookie statistics or the Risk Calculator.

A German court ruled that SCHUFA Holding AG, a major credit rating agency, improperly stored a businessman's insolvency information beyond the allowed time. This ruling is significant because it emphasizes that companies must follow legal guidelines for data retention. It serves as a warning for businesses to manage personal data responsibly.

What happened

SCHUFA Holding AG stored a businessman's insolvency information longer than legally permitted.

Who was affected

A businessman operating a one-man business in the steel pipe trading sector was affected.

What the authority found

The court decided that SCHUFA violated data protection rules by retaining the insolvency data beyond the six-month limit after the proceedings ended.

Why this matters

This ruling reinforces the need for credit agencies to adhere to data retention laws. Companies must regularly review their data storage practices to avoid similar issues.

GDPR Articles Cited

AI-verified

Art. 6(1)(e) GDPR
Art. 6(1)(f) GDPR
Art. 17(1)(d) GDPR
View original scraped data
Art. 6(1)(e) GDPR
Art. 6(1)(f) GDPR
Art. 17(1)(d) GDPR

Original data from scraper before AI verification against source document.

National Law Articles

AI-identified

§ 3 InsoBekVO
Decision AuthorityOLG Schleswig
Reviewed AuthorityLG Kiel (Germany)
Source verified 21 March 2026
authority corrected
national law identified
Full Legal Summary
Detailed

The controller is the SCHUFA Holding AG, the biggest German credit rating agency. The data subject is as a businessman operating an one-man business in the steel pipe trading sector and working as a commercial agent as a side-job. In the past, insolvency proceedings had been initiated against the data subject which was published - as required under German law - on the insolvency announcement portal "www.insolvenzbekanntmachungen.de". On March 25 2020, these proceedings were terminated. Under § 3(1) of the German Insolvency Announcement Regulation (InsoBekV) (a provision implementing and specifying EU insolvency law) entries in the insolvency announcement portal must be deleted not later than six months after the termination of the insolvency proceedings. The respective entry on the data subject was deleted during this period in the portal. The controller, however, stored the information about the insolvency proceedings in their own database even after this period. As a result of these records, the data subject was not able to switch his health insurance, rent an apartment or conduct business without prepayment. On 30 November 2020, the data subject requested the controller to stop disclosing the personal information from his insolvency proceedings to third parties and delete the information. The controller rejected the request of the data subject. It argued that its customers have a legitimate interest to know that the data subject had been insolvent during the time of the insolvency proceedings even after the six months period has elapsed. It considered a three years storage period appropriate as laid down in the "Rules of conduct for the review and deletion periods of personal data by the German credit agencies" ("Verhaltensregeln für die Prüf- und Löschfristen von personenbezogenen Daten durch die deutschen Wirtschaftsauskunfteien") ("Rules of Conduct"), an internal policy of the association of the biggest German credit rating agencies ("Die Wirtschaftsauskun

Outcome

Court Ruling

A ruling by a national court on a data-protection matter.

Details

Ruling Date

3 June 2022

Authority

DPA LGKiel

About this data

Data: GDPRhub (noyb.eu)
Licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
AI-verified and classified

Cite as: Cookie Fines. SCHUFA Holding AG - Germany (2022). Retrieved from cookiefines.eu

Report Inaccuracy

Last updated: