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Lending · Lesson 1 of 5

Lending licensing, in plain English

What a lending license actually authorizes, the per-state cadence, and the common entry points for a new lender.

About 3 minutes to read

What you'll learn

  • The activities that typically trigger a state lending license
  • Why "consumer" versus "commercial" lending separates the paperwork
  • What the typical first application looks like

Lending is licensed per state, per activity

A state lending license generally authorizes a specific activity in a specific state , consumer lending, supervised lending, commercial lending, motor-vehicle sales finance, payday lending , each is its own license type in most states. Operating across five states with two activity types usually means around ten separate license decisions.

Consumer versus commercial

The biggest single split in lending licensing is consumer versus commercial. Consumer lending pulls in much heavier disclosure and rate-cap rules at the state level. Commercial lending is lighter in most states, but a handful regulate it explicitly. Operators that lend to both audiences typically hold two license families per state.

What the first application looks like

A typical first lending application packages the legal entity documents, a Certificate of authorityA state filing that lets a company formed in one state legally do business in another. Often a prerequisite for a state license. for the state, a Surety bondA three-party guarantee. The state requires the bond, the business buys it from a surety, and the state can claim against it if the business harms the public. sized to the state's rule, financial statements, background checks on the Control personAn owner, officer, or director with enough authority over a regulated entity that regulators want to vet them personally, often via background checks and disclosure forms. list, and a description of the lending product. Filing happens through the state regulator's portal, often the NMLSThe Nationwide Multistate Licensing System. The shared filing system used for most mortgage and consumer-finance license types across states. for consumer lending.

How we'd handle it

The lending licensing stack, per-state applications, bonds, background-check rounds, and renewals, is the kind of thing that's hard to track yourself across many states. Cornerstone Licensing runs the back office so the calendar stays current and your team stays focused on lending.

FAQ

Questions operators ask about this lesson

Is one lending license per state ever enough?

Sometimes for a single product. Most growing lenders end up with several license types per state as they add products.

Live Regulatory Feed

Recent Regulatory Activity

Rule changes and agency updates we're tracking across all states for this topic. Most operators run in more than one state, so we show what's moving everywhere.

  • Info Delaware General Assembly DE Jul 14, 2026

    Delaware enacted financial services modernization package covering banking, money transmission, virtual currency, and payment stablecoins

    A July 10, 2026 regulatory alert reported that Delaware enacted a three-bill financial services modernization package. The package covers banking modernization, money transmission and virtual currency licensing, and payment stablecoins.

  • Action Washington Department of Financial Institutions WA Jul 14, 2026

    Washington DFI set July 14, 2026 deadline for Q1 2026 Mortgage Call Report and required Form Version 7 for certain licensees

    Washington DFI stated that Q1 2026 Mortgage Call Report filings for Washington were due July 14, 2026. Beginning with 2026, certain mortgage and consumer loan licensees also had to use MCR Form Version 7.

  • Watch Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation IL Jul 14, 2026

    Illinois proposed banking rules published in the Illinois Register

    On July 6, 2026, proposed Illinois banking rules were published in the Illinois Register, including topics such as minimum organizational capital requirements and fiduciary applications. As of July 14, 2026, these items were still proposed and had not been verified as adopted.

  • Action Georgia Department of Banking and Finance GA Jul 14, 2026

    Georgia transaction hold guidance for suspected financial abuse became operative

    Effective July 1, 2026, Georgia law expressly authorizes financial institutions to place a hold on certain transactions where financial abuse is suspected. DBF published Georgia Transaction Hold Guidance addressing the change.