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Money transmitter · Lesson 2 of 5

Bonds and net worth for money transmitters

How surety bonds attach to an MTL, how the bond amount scales with transmission volume, and how minimum net worth interacts with the bond.

About 3 minutes to read

Builds on

What you'll learn

  • How MTL bond amounts are typically set and tiered
  • Why permissible investments and net worth sit alongside the bond
  • What underwriting on an MSB principal usually looks at

Bonds attach to the license, per state

Each MTL generally carries its own 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. written to the state's statutory form. Most states size the bond as a tiered function of in-state transmission volume, with a floor (commonly in the low six figures) and a cap (commonly in the low millions). A multi-state transmitter carries a portfolio of bonds, not a single master bond, and the renewal dates rarely line up.

Net worth and permissible investments sit alongside the bond

MTLs are unusual among state licenses in that the bond is only part of the financial cushion the state requires. Most states also set a minimum tangible net worth (often six or seven figures, scaled to volume) and a permissible-investments rule that requires the transmitter to hold liquid assets equal to outstanding customer obligations at all times. The bond, the net worth floor, and the permissible-investments coverage are three separate tests the transmitter passes continuously.

Underwriting on the principal

Surety underwriting on an MSB principal looks at audited financials, 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 their personal credit, the BSA/AML program, and the product mix. Virtual currency exposure, payroll exposure, and any history of regulator actions all move the premium. Newer transmitters with thinner balance sheets sometimes post collateral to the surety in addition to the premium.

The estimator below sizes the bond portfolio for an MTL footprint: pick the bond type, the states you intend to operate in, and a credit range to see typical annual premiums.

Surety bond premiums vary based on bond amount, credit history, and state requirements. Select your bond type, target states, and credit range to see estimated annual premiums based on published requirements and typical market rates.

Free ~2 minutes Personalized report

This information is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, regulatory, or compliance advice. Requirements vary and change frequently. Consult with a qualified professional before making business decisions.

These are estimated ranges, not quotes. Final premium is set by underwriting and depends on the bond amount, your credit and financials, the bond class, and the obligee. A firm number takes a short application. Rates as of 2026-06-17. See the bond cost index for amounts and premium ranges by bond and state.

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

Can the same bond cover multiple states?

Almost never. Each state requires its own bond on its own form. A handful of states accept a multi-state model form developed through the NMLSThe Nationwide Multistate Licensing System. The shared filing system used for most mortgage and consumer-finance license types across states. working groups, but the obligee and face amount are still per state.

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.