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South Carolina application

Apply for your South Carolina money transmitter with Cornerstone Licensing

Apply online for your South Carolina money transmitter with Cornerstone Licensing. South Carolina requirements and timelines up front, then start your application in minutes.

Direct answer

Do I need a money transmitter license in South Carolina?

Yes, South Carolina requires a money transmitter license. Complete guide to money transmitter licensing in South Carolina. Covers application requirements, surety bond amounts, net worth minimums, FinCEN registration, and key statutes governing money transmission in South Carolina. The state requires a $25,000 surety bond, which Cornerstone Licensing places in-house as part of the application.

Quick answers for South Carolina

Do I need a license to operate a money transmitter business in South Carolina?
Yes. Complete guide to money transmitter licensing in South Carolina. Covers application requirements, surety bond amounts, net worth minimums, FinCEN registration, and key statutes governing money transmission in South Carolina.
Is a surety bond required?
Bond required: $25,000.
How long does it take?
Typical end-to-end: 21 to 42 weeks. Our team works ahead of every preconditional step (entity, fingerprints, bond) so the application opens on day one.
What about renewals?
Renews annually.

South Carolina money transmitter requirements at a glance

Application process

To obtain a money transmitter license in South Carolina, applicants generally need to submit a completed application to the South Carolina Board of Financial Institutions, provide a surety bond of $25,000-$500,000, demonstrate minimum net worth of $100,000, provide audited financial statements, implement a comprehensive BSA/AML filings program, and pass background checks for all control persons. Many states now accept applications through NMLS. The application process typically takes 3-12 months depending on the state and complexity of the applicant's business model.

Renewal requirements

Money transmitter licenses in South Carolina generally require annual renewal. Renewal typically requires submission of audited financial statements, updated surety bond, quarterly or annual transaction reports, BSA/AML filing documentation, and payment of renewal fees. Some states require call report filings on a quarterly basis throughout the year.

Regulator: South Carolina Board of Financial Institutions

How Cornerstone Licensing handles your South Carolina money transmitter license

You do not chase the state. We run the full application end to end and keep you posted at each step.

  • We prepare your entity documents and every South Carolina state filing, then submit and track the file through approval.
  • We place your $25,000 South Carolina surety bond in-house, so bonding never becomes a separate errand.
  • We sequence the work so the application opens on day one; South Carolina filings typically run 21 to 42 weeks end to end.
  • We monitor your South Carolina renewal calendar and file each renewal on time, every cycle.
  • Government filing fees are billed at cost with no markup, and we quote our service fee up front.

Start your South Carolina application

The wizard below pre-selects South Carolina so you can move straight to license type, ownership, and timing. Save and resume from any device.

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Applying for a South Carolina money transmitter license: FAQ

How do I apply for a money transmitter license in South Carolina?
Start your application on this page. Cornerstone Licensing prepares your entity documents and state filings, places any required surety bond, and submits your file to South Carolina Board of Financial Institutions, then tracks it through approval.
Can you place my South Carolina surety bond?
Yes. We place your $25,000 South Carolina surety bond in-house as part of the application, so bonding never holds up your file.
How soon can I start?
Right now. The application below pre-selects South Carolina, and you can save your progress and resume from any device.
What does it cost?
Government filing fees are set by South Carolina Board of Financial Institutions and billed at cost with no markup. We quote our service fee up front once we scope your application, so there are no surprise charges.

Keep exploring South Carolina money transmitter licensing

Read the deep regulatory write-up, compare every state, or line up the bond and coverage that go with the license.

Prefer to talk first?

Call our South Carolina licensing team or start the wizard whenever you are ready.

Apply in South Carolina