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# Mortgage licensing, in plain English

What state mortgage licensing actually covers, the split between company and individual licensing, and the role of the NMLS.

## What you will learn

- The split between a company license and an MLO license
- What the [[term:nmls]] is and isn't
- The typical first application stack

## Two licenses, not one

Most states license the mortgage company separately from each individual who takes loan applications for it. The company holds a state mortgage broker or lender license. Each individual loan originator holds a separate [[term:mlo]] license. Both are tracked through the [[term:nmls]].

## What the NMLS is and isn't

The [[term:nmls]] is a shared filing and record-keeping system used across the states for mortgage and consumer-finance licensing. It is not a license, and it is not a federal regulator. The states still issue the licenses; the [[term:nmls]] reduces the duplicate paperwork.

## The first application stack

A new state mortgage application typically packages an [[term:nmls]] company filing, a [[term:certificate-of-authority]] for the state, a [[term:surety-bond]] in the state's required form, financial statements, background checks on the [[term:control-person]] list, and individual [[term:mlo]] applications for the originators who'll work in that state.

## FAQs

### Does an MLO need a license per state where they originate?

Generally yes. A [[term:mlo]] holds a separate license in every state where they take applications. The [[term:nmls]] makes the paperwork repeatable but the per-state decision still happens.
