Skip to content

Money transmitter · Lesson 1 of 5

Money transmitter licensing, in plain English

What an MTL actually authorizes, how the state regime interacts with FinCEN, and where the common entry points sit for a new MSB.

About 4 minutes to read

What you'll learn

  • The activities that typically trigger a state money transmitter license
  • Why the state MTL regime sits on top of federal MSB registration
  • What the first MTL application stack usually looks like

Money transmission is licensed per state

A money transmitter license (MTL) generally authorizes the transmission of monetary value on behalf of others inside one state. Forty-nine of the fifty states license money transmission directly. Montana is the long-standing exception.

Operating in the lower 48 plus DC plus Puerto Rico usually means around fifty separate license decisions. Each one carries its own application, fee, 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., and renewal cycle.

The activities that trip the MTL definition are familiar. They include holding customer funds in transit, payroll processing where the funds touch your accounts, prepaid access programs, remittance, and bill-pay aggregation. In most states, they also include the exchange or custody of virtual currency.

FinCEN sits on top, the states sit underneath

Every MSB also registers federally with FinCEN under the Bank Secrecy Act. Federal registration has two parts. One is a one-time filing renewed every two years. The other is a Bank Secrecy Act / AML program the business actually runs.

This does not replace a state MTL. A new transmitter usually registers with FinCEN early, well before the first state license issues. The FinCEN registration number is part of the state application package.

What the first application looks like

A typical first MTL application packages several documents. It includes 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, and 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.

It adds audited financial statements, a minimum-net-worth attestation, and the FinCEN MSB registration number. It also carries a written BSA/AML program, background checks and biographical disclosures 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 products in scope. Most states accept the filing through the NMLSThe Nationwide Multistate Licensing System. The shared filing system used for most mortgage and consumer-finance license types across states. money services businesses module.

How we'd handle it

The money transmitter stack, per-state MTLs on top of FinCEN MSB registration, surety bonds sized to in-state volume, minimum net worth and daily permissible-investments coverage, NMLS coordination, and quarterly state call reports, is the kind of thing that's hard to track yourself across forty-nine states. Cornerstone Surety Bonds runs the back office so the calendar stays current and your team stays focused on moving customer funds.

FAQ

Questions operators ask about this lesson

Does the agent-of-payee exemption help?

In some states, yes. Where it applies, a payment processor acting as the agent of the payee under a written contract is not transmitting on behalf of the payor and does not need an MTL. The carve-out exists in roughly half the states, with meaningful drafting differences. Most operators get a written legal read per state before relying on it.

Is virtual currency activity covered by a money transmitter license?

It depends on the state. Most states now treat custodial virtual currency activity as money transmission and license it under the existing MTL. A handful have a separate regime (New York's BitLicense is the best-known example). A small group still has no clear answer.

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.

  • Action Georgia Department of Banking and Finance GA Jul 13, 2026

    Georgia Money Transmitter Penalty Rule 80-3-4-.01 Effective

    Georgia rule 80-3-4-. 01 became effective July 6, 2026 and sets administrative fines tied to money transmitter violations.

  • Action Virginia state legislature and state financial regulator VA Jul 5, 2026

    Virginia full MTMA implementation becomes effective

    Virginia's full implementation of the Money Transmission Modernization Act became effective on July 1, 2026. The change places Virginia among the states adopting more standardized money transmission rules on capital, surety bond, and permissible investments.

  • Action Louisiana Legislature LA Jul 1, 2026

    Louisiana Money Transmission Act Takes Effect

    Louisiana enacted HB 1230 creating the Louisiana Money Transmission Act in Title 6, Chapter 13, effective July 1, 2026. Legislative materials indicate the law includes licensing provisions such as application investigation, fees, and surety bond requirements.

  • Action Louisiana Legislature LA Jun 30, 2026

    Louisiana enacts comprehensive Money Transmission Act

    Louisiana enacted HB 1230, a new comprehensive Money Transmission Act signed on June 9, 2026. The law takes effect July 1, 2026 and replaces the prior framework with a broader licensing, supervision, reporting, net worth, surety bond, permissible investment, and authorized agent structure aligned with the CSBS model.