Overview
A lender bond is the surety bond a state regulator requires as a condition of a consumer lending license. It guarantees that the licensed lender will follow the state's lending law, including limits on rates and fees, disclosure rules, and the handling of borrower payments. If the lender violates the law and causes a borrower or the state a loss, a claim can be made against the bond up to its amount.
The specific license, and therefore the specific bond, depends on the kind of lending and the state. Installment lenders, small-loan and payday lenders, sales finance companies, supervised lenders, consumer discount companies, money lenders, and student loan servicers each fall under a different statute, and many states set the bond amount per licensed location. Because the bond guarantees compliance rather than insuring the lender, underwriting reviews the owners' credit and the company's financial strength.
This page is the hub for the consumer lending bonds Cornerstone Surety writes. The required amount is set by each state's regulator, and the lender reimburses the surety for any paid claim under the indemnity agreement.
Who needs this bond
Companies licensed to make consumer loans, including installment lenders, small-loan and payday lenders, sales finance companies, supervised and money lenders, and student loan servicers in states that condition the license on a posted bond.
Typical amount and term
Bond amount is set by each state's regulator and often scales with the number of licensed locations. Premium runs 1 to 3 percent of the bond amount for well-qualified applicants. Term is usually one to three years.
What this bond costs
Your premium is a small percentage of the bond amount, set by underwriting. The biggest drivers:
- The state-set bond amount, which often scales with the number of licensed locations
- The owners' personal credit
- The company's financial statements and time in business
- The type of lending license and the state's requirements
| Scenario | Bond amount | Estimated premium |
|---|---|---|
| Single-location lender, strong credit | $25,000 bond | around 1 to 2 percent per year |
| Multi-state lender, several licenses | $50,000 per state | around 1.5 to 3 percent per year |
| Newer lender, limited history | $25,000 bond | rate is higher until a track record is built |
Figures are illustrative premium ranges, not quotes or statutory amounts. Your rate depends on the bond amount your obligee requires and your underwriting profile.
What you will need
- State of license and license or application number
- Two years of business financials
- Owner credit authorization
- Number of licensed locations
How to apply
- Send your state, license type, and the required bond amount
- Receive a per-state quote within one business day
- Sign and pay, then we file the bond with the regulator
How a surety bond differs from insurance
A lender bond is a surety guarantee that protects borrowers and the state, not the lender. Errors and omissions or other business insurance protects the company's own balance sheet. The bond backstops compliant lending; insurance transfers the lender's own risk. If the surety pays a claim, the lender repays it under the indemnity agreement.
Frequently asked questions
Which lender bond do I need?
It depends on your license. Installment, small-loan, payday, supervised lender, consumer discount, sales finance, money lender, and student loan servicer licenses each carry their own bond. Tell us your state and license type and we will match the right bond.
How is the bond amount set?
By each state's regulator. Many states set a fixed amount per license or scale it by the number of licensed locations, so a multi-state lender posts a separate bond in each state.
Do I need a bond in every state where I lend?
Generally yes. The bond is tied to each state license, so a lender operating in several states usually posts a bond in each one at that state's required amount.
What does the premium depend on?
Mainly the bond amount, the owners' credit, and the company's financial strength. Well-qualified lenders pay a small percentage of the bond amount. The figures on this page are illustrative, not a quote.
More finance and lending bonds
Reviewed by the Cornerstone Surety bond team. Last reviewed 2026-06-17.