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Mortgage · Lesson 2 of 5

Mortgage bonds: company and originator

The bond piece for both the company and the individuals it employs.

About 2 minutes to read

Builds on

What you'll learn

  • How company bond amounts are typically scaled
  • When an originator-level bond shows up
  • How underwriting changes for newer companies

Company bonds scale with volume

Most states size the mortgage company 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. by the company's loan-origination volume in the state, often in tiers. As volume grows the company's bond face amount tends to step up at the next renewal.

Originator-level bonds

A handful of states require an originator-level bond separate from the company bond. Most do not. Where they do, the NMLSThe Nationwide Multistate Licensing System. The shared filing system used for most mortgage and consumer-finance license types across states. filing surfaces the requirement during the application.

Underwriting on newer companies

Surety underwriting on a new mortgage company leans heavily 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. credit and the company's projected volume. As the company builds a track record the underwriting question shifts toward financial statements and loss history.

The estimator below sizes the company-side bond portfolio at a glance: pick the mortgage bond type, your target states, and a credit range.

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 mortgage licensing stack, company licensing, originator licensing, bonds, and per-state renewals, is the kind of thing that's hard to track yourself across many states. Cornerstone Surety Bonds runs the back office so the calendar stays current and your team stays focused on closing loans.

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 Louisiana Legislature / Governor LA Jun 29, 2026

    Louisiana Enacts New Money Transmission Act

    Louisiana enacted a new Money Transmission Act through House Bill 1230, signed June 9, 2026, with an effective date of July 1, 2026. The law largely tracks the CSBS model and updates licensing through NMLS, quarterly call reporting, annual audited financials, net worth and surety bond standards, permissible investments, agent oversight, and enforcement authority.

  • Action Virginia General Assembly Code / State Licensing Framework VA May 27, 2026

    Virginia Money Transmitter Licensing Chapter with NMLS-Based Consistent State Licensing

    Virginia's new money transmitter chapter was visible during the May 13 to May 27, 2026 period with an effective date of July 1, 2026. The law requires a license to engage in money transmission or hold out as a money transmitter, subject to exemptions, and adds a consistent state licensing provision allowing use of NMLS for applications, control changes, bonding, reporting, fee processing, background checks, and examinations.