Ohio · State Guide

Personal Loans in Ohio: The Four-Statute Framework Borrowers Should Understand

Ohio regulates consumer lending through four distinct statutes, the Short-Term Loan Act, Consumer Installment Loan Act, Small Loan Act, and Second Mortgage Loan Act, each with its own rate caps and rules. House Bill 123 (2018) restructured the small-dollar market and capped short-term loans at 28%, but the lending landscape remains more complex than most states.

 
 

APR range (network)

6.99%–35.99%

Short-Term Loan cap

28% APR

HB 123 effective

April 2019

📋 Notice at Collection This form collects personal and financial info shared with lending partners. Your privacy rights apply.
What we collect: Your name, contact info, date of birth, Social Security number, driver's license number, address, employment and income details, bank account and routing numbers, and information about your device and how you use this site.
Why we collect it: To match you with up to five lending or financial-services partners who may offer you a loan, to verify your identity, to pull a consumer credit report (with your authorization), and to send you communications by phone, SMS, and email about your application.
Who we share it with: Lending partners, identity verification vendors (GeniusVerify, SuperVerify, Jornaya, TrustedForm), loan marketplace aggregators (including ML Enterprise Inc. d/b/a Engine by MoneyLion), advertising and analytics platforms, and service providers who help us operate this site. Sharing your data with partners who pay us a referral fee may be considered a "sale" or "sharing" under California and other state laws.
How long we keep it: Up to 7 years for completed applications, 90 days for incomplete ones. Marketing data is kept until you unsubscribe.
Your rights: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Virginia, and several other state residents have rights to access, delete, correct, and opt out of the sale or sharing of their information, and to limit the use of sensitive information like SSN and bank account numbers.
Step 1 of 4 25% complete

Check your loan offers

See competitive rates in minutes — no commitment, no credit check required.

Secure & encrypted
No credit impact
Takes 2 minutes

By continuing you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. We share your information with our lending partners to match you with loan offers. See our Privacy Policy and your opt-out rights.

🎉
Great start — you're already ahead!
One more quick step and we start matching you with real offers. Most applicants finish this in under 60 seconds.
Your requested amount:

Confirm your identity

Lenders need this to verify you and prepare your personalized offer.

Must be 18+
Encrypted — never stored in plain text
Increases approval chances
If different from residence state
Improves your match rate
Your SSN and personal data are encrypted end-to-end using 256-bit SSL. This information is used only for identity verification and lender matching — it is never stored in plain text.

Completing this step allows us to match your profile with our lender network. Your information is protected under our Privacy Policy.

You're almost there — step 3 of 4
Adding your employment info significantly increases your approval chances. Most applicants finish this in under 90 seconds.

Your employment & income

This helps lenders understand your repayment capacity and offer you better terms.

⚠ Exact values required — do not customize
Helps lenders verify job tenure
⚠ Exact values required
⚠ Exact values required
Required if bi-weekly or twice monthly
Matching your offers...
We're reviewing your request and connecting you with lenders. You'll be redirected to your best available offer momentarily.

Processing securely via 256-bit encryption

🏁
Final step — you're this close!
This unlocks our full lender network and maximizes your approval odds. Just a few more details.

Banking information

Used to verify your identity and set up your loan if approved.

Your banking details are encrypted end-to-end. This information is used only to verify eligibility and set up deposits — never shared without your consent.
Found at the bottom left of your checks
Improves approval odds
Required by most lenders

Ohio's Four Consumer Lending Statutes

Ohio’s consumer lending market is shaped by four separate statutes, each governing a different segment of the market. The most important reform of the past decade was House Bill 123 (2018), passed with bipartisan support, which restructured the Short-Term Loan Act to cap payday-style loans at 28% APR and reshape how lenders can charge fees.

 

The 28% cap originated from a 2008 ballot initiative supported by 63.6% of Ohio voters. For a decade, payday lenders evaded the cap through loopholes, most notably the Credit Services Organization (CSO) Act, which allowed brokering schemes that pushed effective APRs above 300%. HB 123 closed these loopholes and required all short-term lenders to operate under the modernized framework.

North Carolina CFA Tiered Rate Structure (Loans ≤ $12,000)

Statute

Loans Covered

Key Rate Provision

Short-Term Loan Act (HB 123)

Loans of $1,000 or less; terms ≤ 1 year

28% APR + limited fees

Consumer Installment Loan Act (CILA)

Closed-end and open-end consumer credit

Tiered structure; no statutory APR cap

Small Loan Act

Loans above $1,000 (post-HB 123)

25% maximum interest

Second Mortgage Loan Act

Subordinate residential loans

Various rate provisions

Source: Ohio Revised Code Chapters 1321 and 1322. For current statutory text and licensee directories, see Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of Financial Institutions. Network partners cap APRs at 35.99% nationwide.

Why the lending market in Ohio looks different now

Before HB 123, Ohio had over 800 payday and auto-title storefronts. By the end of 2019, that number had dropped to 246 licensed stores. The reform didn’t eliminate small-dollar lending, applications and originations actually increased at not-for-profit and traditional installment lenders, but it eliminated the highest-cost predatory products. Ohio Department of Commerce data shows the weighted average contracted rate on remaining short-term loans is around 148% (driven by the limited fees still permitted), compared to APRs over 400% before HB 123.

 

Ohio Market: What Borrowers Should Know

Ohio’s economy mixes major manufacturing centers (Cleveland, Akron, Toledo) with services hubs (Columbus, Cincinnati) and significant rural Appalachian regions. The lending market reflects this diversity, banks and credit unions dominate prime-credit lending, while licensed CILA and Small Loan lenders serve the subprime market within the state’s tighter rate framework.

 
 

$70,300

Ohio median household income (2024 ACS estimate)
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2024 American Community Survey

715

Average credit score in Ohio, slightly above U.S. average of 713
Source: Experian Consumer Credit Review

~7.0%

Ohio uninsured rate (2024), below the national 8.2%
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2024 ACS Health Insurance Coverage

72%

Ohio voters supporting a 36% rate cap on consumer loans (2020 polling)
Source: Policy Matters Ohio polling

Ohio voters have repeatedly demonstrated strong support for stricter rate caps. The 2008 ballot vote (63.6%) confirmed the original 28% cap, and 2020 polling found 72% support for a stricter 36% cap. Whether that policy gets enacted remains a legislative question, but it suggests Ohio’s regulatory direction continues to favor borrowers over high-cost lenders.

Consumer Protections Specific to Ohio

Department of Commerce licensing

The Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of Financial Institutions licenses lenders under all four consumer lending statutes. You can verify any lender via the Department’s online licensee search. Unlicensed lending is unenforceable, and the Department maintains active enforcement against violators.

HB 123's structural reforms

Beyond the 28% cap, HB 123 introduced several borrower protections specific to Ohio: licensees must require borrowers to sign a written declaration of eligibility; lenders cannot make concurrent short-term loans to the same borrower; and licensed installment lenders must follow strict disclosure requirements. The law also prohibited registered Credit Services Organizations from arranging loans under $5,000 or above 28% APR, closing a major loophole.

Online lending exemption

HB 123 specifically permitted online lending under the Short-Term Loan Act, ensuring that out-of-state online lenders cannot operate in Ohio without complying with the same 28% cap that applies to storefront lenders. This is a significant difference from many states where online operators evade local rate caps.

 

Military Lending Act

Ohio hosts Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and several Air National Guard installations. Active-duty servicemembers and dependents are covered by the federal Military Lending Act, capping most consumer APRs at 36% all-in. For most short-term loan products in Ohio, the state 28% cap is more restrictive than the federal MLA cap.

CSO loophole closure

If you’re being offered a loan in Ohio through a “Credit Services Organization” or any third-party broker arrangement that adds fees on top of a low base interest rate, verify carefully. Post-HB 123, CSOs cannot legally arrange loans under $5,000 or above 28% APR. Any such arrangement is likely a violation and the loan may be unenforceable.

Estimate Your Ohio Payment

Use the calculator below to see what a personal loan might cost monthly. Your actual offer depends on credit, income, and the specific lender.

Estimate Your Personal Loan Payment

Loan Amount
$3,000
$1,000 $5,000
Loan Term
36 months
12 mo 84 mo
Estimated APR
15.00%
6% 35.99%
Monthly Payment
$104
Total Repayable
$3,744
Total Interest
$744

This calculator provides estimates only. Actual loan terms, APR, and monthly payments are determined by individual lenders based on your credit profile. Results do not constitute a loan offer or guarantee of approval.

Common Uses for Personal Loans in Ohio

Home improvement

Ohio's older housing stock, much of it built mid-century, drives substantial home repair lending, especially in industrial cities.

Debt consolidation

Particularly common in major metros like Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati where credit card balances accumulate.

Heating costs

Ohio winters are severe; some borrowers use personal loans to bridge heating costs not covered by federal assistance programs.

Auto-related expenses

Major repairs or down payments, especially in suburban areas with limited transit.

Manufacturing-sector layoff bridging

Ohio's industrial economy still produces periodic layoffs; personal loans sometimes bridge gaps before unemployment kicks in.

What Lenders in Our Network Look For

Income:

Typically $800/month minimum from verifiable sources.

Credit profile:

All credit types considered. Some lenders work with scores starting at 580.

Debt-to-income ratio:

Usually below 45–50%.

Active Ohio bank account

For ACH funding and repayment.

Valid Ohio ID

Or other U.S.-recognized identification.

What funding actually looks like

After approval, funding typically arrives within 1 to 7 business days, depending on the lender and your bank’s ACH processing.

Ohio-Specific FAQ

What is the maximum APR on a personal loan in Ohio?

It depends on the loan type. Short-Term Loan Act loans (under $1,000, term ≤ 1 year) are capped at 28% APR plus limited fees. Loans above $1,000 typically operate under the Small Loan Act (25% maximum) or Consumer Installment Loan Act (varies). Network partners cap APRs at 35.99% nationwide, with most prime-credit Ohio borrowers seeing rates well below that.

Can I still get a payday loan in Ohio?

Payday-style loans still exist in Ohio, but they’re now structured under HB 123’s framework, capped at 28% APR with strict fee limits and a minimum 91-day term. The triple-digit APR products that operated before 2019 are no longer legal. The number of licensed short-term lenders dropped from 800+ to 246 after HB 123 took effect.

What happens if a lender violates Ohio lending laws?

Violations can render the loan unenforceable and expose the lender to civil penalties from the Ohio Department of Commerce. Borrowers can also pursue claims under Ohio’s Consumer Sales Practices Act. Report violations to the Department of Commerce or the Ohio Attorney General.

Are online lenders required to follow Ohio's 28% cap?

Yes. HB 123 specifically extended the 28% Short-Term Loan Act cap to online lending. Out-of-state online operators cannot evade Ohio’s framework simply by lacking a physical presence. Federally chartered banks may operate under separate authority, but non-bank online lenders must comply.

Why does Ohio have four separate consumer lending statutes?

The structure evolved over decades, with each statute originally addressing a different segment of the lending market. HB 123 partially modernized the framework but didn’t consolidate them, meaning lenders may still operate under whichever framework best fits their product. For borrowers, the practical effect is that you should always verify which statute governs your specific loan to understand the applicable consumer protections.

Sources & References

  1. Ohio House Bill 123 (2018) — Short-Term Loan Act reforms
  2. Ohio Revised Code Chapter 1321 — Consumer lending provisions
  3. Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of Financial Institutions — com.ohio.gov
  4. Policy Matters Ohio — Better Loans, Greater Security analysis
  5. Center for Responsible Lending — Ohio Bill Analysis (2018)
  6. U.S. Census Bureau — Ohio median household income (2024 ACS)
  7. Experian Consumer Credit Review — Ohio average FICO 715
  8. Federal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit Report
  9. Military Lending Act, 10 U.S.C. § 987
Personal Loans Guide

Check Your Options

Get referred with lenders who may offer the loan you’re looking for. No obligation to accept.

Checking your options typically involves a soft credit inquiry. Final approval may require a hard inquiry from the lender.

Redirecting...
You are being transferred to a third-party website where you may view loan offers.