lending
California Lending Laws & Licensing Requirements
Guide to consumer and commercial lending licensing in California. Covers which loan products trigger a license, the state regulator, surety bond and net worth expectations, key statutes, and the application path for lenders operating in California.
- Regulatory body
- California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI)
- License required
- varies
- Bond required
- Bond amount set by regulator (confirm with state)
Application process
Lenders in California are generally licensed based on the loan product, the interest rate, the loan amount, and whether the borrower is a consumer or a business. Consumer lenders commonly apply to the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI) for a consumer finance, small loan, installment loan, or supervised lender license, often through the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System (NMLS) where the state participates. Applications typically require a surety bond, financial statements, a minimum net worth, background checks for control persons, and disclosure of the lending products and rates offered. Commercial lending may be lighter touch, though a growing number of states require a license or specific disclosures for business-purpose financing. Confirm the exact license type and requirements with the regulator before lending.
Renewals
Lending licenses in California generally renew on an annual cycle. Renewal commonly requires updated financial statements, confirmation of the surety bond, payment of renewal fees, and any required annual reports. States that use NMLS typically run renewal in the November to December window. Confirm the renewal cadence and fees with the regulator.
License type in California depends on the loan product, the rate charged, and the loan amount, so the same lender may need different licenses for different products. Lenders are also expected to comply with federal requirements including the Truth in Lending Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau oversight. This is a seeded baseline; confirm the specific license type, bond amount, fees, and statute citations with the California regulator before relying on it.