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New Carleton survey finds lenders facing migration crisis with legacy systems



News from the Wire

New Carleton survey finds lenders facing migration crisis with legacy systems

Monday, June 08, 2026 — 15:18:16 (UTC)

New Carleton Survey Finds Lending Industry Facing a Migration Crisis as Legacy Systems Threaten Compliance, Security and Growth

More than three-quarters of lending professionals rate modernization as extremely or very urgent, yet cost constraints, limited resources and disruption concerns continue to slow progress

SOUTH BEND, IN (June 4, 2026) — Carleton, a leading provider of compliant loan calculation and disclosure solutions, today released findings from its inaugural Platform Migration and Modernization Survey, revealing that the consumer lending industry is facing mounting pressure to modernize aging technology infrastructure. While urgency is near-universal, a significant share of lending institutions remain anchored to legacy systems that expose them to growing compliance, security and operational risk.

A Market That Knows It Must Move — But Largely Has Not

The data paints a picture of an industry in transition, but one where the pace of change remains slow relative to the scale of the operational, compliance, and security risks involved. Nearly nine in ten respondents (87%) are engaged in migration in some form, yet only 8.7% have fully completed the process. More than half of respondents (74%) describe their current environment as primarily legacy, and just 10.6% operate on a fully cloud-based platform.

The gap between awareness and action is striking. A combined 76.5% of respondents rated the need to modernize their platform as extremely or very urgent. At the same time, more than one in five organizations (23%) report they are still only considering migration without a defined timeline. For an industry built on precision calculation and regulatory accountability, that gap represents significant and compounding exposure.

What Is Holding Lenders Back

The barriers to migration are structural, not philosophical. Respondents who have delayed modernization pointed most frequently to cost constraints, cited by 28.6%, and limited internal resources, cited by 31.6%. Disruption concerns were cited by 15.6% of respondents, reflecting a deeply ingrained caution about operational continuity during a system transition.

Notably, only 5.3% of respondents cited confidence in their current system as a reason to delay. This tells an important story: the industry is not avoiding migration because it believes its legacy platforms are working well. It is avoiding migration because the path forward is viewed as costly, complex, and risky in ways many organizations do not yet feel equipped to manage internally.

The operational burden of legacy systems compounds the problem. One-third of respondents report spending 80 to 100% of their platform resources on maintenance rather than new development. An additional four out of ten spend between 60 and 80% on maintenance. Organizations carrying that level of overhead have limited internal capacity available to support large-scale modernization initiatives, creating a cycle that is difficult to break without external support.

The Risks of Staying Still Are Escalating

Compliance risks were cited as the most common operational challenge, identified by 35.4% of respondents. Calculation accuracy was named by 23.2% as the area of their platform most in need of modernization, a figure that carries serious implications in a regulatory environment where incorrect consumer lending calculations can trigger enforcement scrutiny, borrower harm and reputational damage.

Implementation timelines reveal another layer of the problem. Nearly one-third of respondents say it takes six months or more to implement a new product or regulatory change, and 12.7% report timelines exceeding one year. Institutions operating that slowly face increased exposure as regulatory updates and market demands move faster than their systems can adapt.

Security compounds the picture further. A security incident was identified as the single most likely event to trigger modernization, cited by 30.2% of respondents. The pattern is troubling: for too many institutions, the forcing function for migration is a crisis rather than a strategy.

The survey also revealed that organizations are increasingly looking for strategic guidance alongside technology solutions. Nearly two-thirds of respondents identified hands-on migration support as the most valuable resource in helping modernize their lending platforms.

“The survey findings echo what Carleton hears in sales and client conversations every day,” Tim Yalich, Vice President of Business Development at Carleton. “Institutions still running on legacy systems, some more than two decades behind their industry peers on technology, are not simply managing aging infrastructure. They are limiting their ability to compete, to grow into new states or asset classes, to integrate with modern fraud prevention tools, and to access the AI-enabled capabilities that are rapidly reshaping how lending decisions are made and monitored.”

About the Survey

The Platform Migration and Modernization Survey was conducted online during the second week of May 2026. The survey gathered 250 responses from lending professionals across banking, auto finance, and fintech. Results are directionally representative of the U.S. consumer lending technology landscape.

For more information about these survey results and learn more about Carleton’s compliance calculation solutions, please visit www.carletoninc.com.

About Carleton, Inc.

Carleton provides integrated financial solutions that support the full lending lifecycle, delivering accurate and compliant loan origination calculations, automated document generation and delivery, and expert audit and compliance services nationwide. For more than 55 years, Carleton has been trusted by lenders, financial institutions, and technology providers to navigate complex federal and state regulations while reducing risk and improving operational efficiency. By unifying calculation accuracy, regulatory compliance, and document workflows into a foundational solution, Carleton elevates its partners’ platforms, helping them accelerate funding, maintain confidence in compliance, and focus on growing their business. To learn more about Carleton’s lending solutions, contact our sales team at sales@carletoninc.com or 574-243-6040 option #3.

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Source: Company press release.

Categories: Reports and research

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