California · State Guide
Personal Loans in California: How the Fair Access to Credit Act Reshaped Lending
In 2019, California passed AB 539, the Fair Access to Credit Act, which extended a 36% APR cap to consumer loans between $2,500 and $10,000. Combined with the California Financing Law and DFPI oversight, it makes California one of the most regulated lending markets in the country. Here’s what borrowers need to know.
APR range (network)
6.99%–35.99%
AB 539 covered range
$2,500–$10K
CA top rate
36% APR
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How California Regulates Personal Loans
California consumer lending is governed primarily by the California Financing Law (CFL), codified at Financial Code § 22000 et seq., administered by the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI). The CFL requires any non-bank lender or broker making consumer loans in California to obtain a CFL license, a process that includes a $25,000 minimum net worth requirement and a $25,000 surety bond.
The CFL itself doesn’t impose a single APR cap, but it does control fees, disclosures, and licensing. The major rate-cap legislation came in 2019 with the Fair Access to Credit Act (AB 539), which extended interest rate limits to a previously unregulated tier of loans.
California Consumer Loan Framework — Current Structure
Loan Size
Rate Framework
Authority
Under $2,500
Tiered structure under CFL §22303 (small dollar)
California Financing Law
$2,500 to $10,000
36% APR cap (Fair Access to Credit Act)
AB 539, effective Jan 2020
Over $10,000
Generally not subject to CFL rate cap; market rates apply
CFL with broader exemptions
Source: California Financial Code § 22000 et seq.; AB 539 (2019). For current statutory text, see DFPI. Network partners cap APRs at 35.99% across all loan sizes.
Why AB 539 mattered
Before 2020, loans between $2,500 and $10,000 in California fell into a regulatory gap, lenders could legally charge triple-digit APRs. AB 539 closed that gap by extending the 36% cap to this entire tier and including most fees in the rate calculation. It’s the key reason the California small-loan market today looks structurally different from neighboring Nevada or Arizona.
California Market: What Borrowers Should Know
California has the largest economy of any state and one of the highest medians for both income and cost of living. Lender competition is intense, but so is the cost of credit relative to other states because California excludes most fees from the 36% cap calculation only when the loan is above $10,000.
$100,130
California median household income (2024 SAIPE / ACS)
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, FRED MHICA06000A052NCEN
722
Average credit score in California, among the highest nationally
Source: Experian / Self Financial state averages
5.9%
California uninsured rate (2024), declined from 6.4% the prior year
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2024 ACS Health Insurance Coverage
~10%
California’s general default usury rate for unlicensed lenders (Cal. Const. Art. XV)
Source: California Constitution Article XV
California is one of two states (with North Carolina) where uninsured rates declined in 2024, driven by state Medicaid expansion. This affects loan demand: medical-purpose personal loans are less common in California than in non-expansion states like Texas.
Consumer Protections Specific to California
DFPI license verification
Any lender making consumer loans above the 10% constitutional usury rate must hold a CFL license. You can verify any lender via the DFPI’s “Search Who We Regulate” tool or by calling (866) 275-2677. CFL violations are serious, under California law, a willful violation makes the loan contract void, meaning the lender cannot collect any principal, interest, or fees.
The CCFPL — California's Mini-CFPB
California also operates under the California Consumer Financial Protection Law (CCFPL), which gives DFPI broad authority to police unfair, deceptive, or abusive practices. Adopted in 2020, it makes California one of the few states with active oversight that mirrors federal CFPB powers, even on entities not licensed under traditional lending statutes.
Military Lending Act
California hosts major military installations including Camp Pendleton, Naval Base San Diego, Travis AFB, Edwards AFB, and Naval Air Station Lemoore. Active-duty servicemembers and dependents are covered by the federal Military Lending Act, which caps most consumer APRs at 36% all-in.
Bank partnership / "rent-a-bank" caution
Some online lenders try to evade California’s 36% cap by partnering with out-of-state banks not subject to CFL rate limits. The DFPI has been actively challenging these arrangements as “true lender” violations. If you see an online lender offering a $5,000 loan to Californians at 90% APR, ask directly whether the lender is CFL-licensed. If they’re not, the loan may be legally void in California, and you have grounds to dispute it.
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Common Uses for Personal Loans in California
Wildfire recovery
California uniquely sees a category of loans tied to wildfire damage, especially in Northern California and the Sierra foothills.
Debt consolidation
California's high cost of living means many residents carry significant credit card balances; consolidation at fixed APRs is the most common loan purpose.
Home improvement
Particularly relevant given California's high property values; unsecured personal loans avoid putting equity at risk.
Earthquake preparation / retrofitting
California has earthquake retrofitting incentive programs, but personal loans often bridge gaps in cost.
Major purchases or relocation
Including in-state moves between expensive metros.
What Lenders in Our Network Look For
Typically $800/month minimum from verifiable sources (employment, self-employment, Social Security, disability, VA benefits).
All credit types considered. California's average score (722) is above national; lenders here tend to have competitive prime offers but tighter underwriting overall.
Usually below 45–50%. California's high cost of living means DTI calculations matter more here than in lower-COL states.
for ACH funding and repayment.
Or other U.S.-recognized identification and U.S. residency status.
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 window.
California-Specific FAQ
What's the maximum APR on a personal loan in California?
Under AB 539 (Fair Access to Credit Act), licensed CFL lenders cannot charge more than 36% APR on consumer loans between $2,500 and $10,000. For loans under $2,500, separate tiered rules apply. For loans over $10,000, no statutory rate cap applies, though the network we work with caps partner APRs at 35.99% across all sizes. The federal Military Lending Act caps APRs at 36% for active-duty servicemembers regardless of loan size.
What happens if a lender violates California rate caps?
Under Financial Code § 22750, willful violations of the CFL render the loan contract void, the lender cannot collect any principal, interest, or charges. Borrowers can also report violations to DFPI for enforcement action. This is one of the strongest borrower remedies of any U.S. state.
Are online lenders required to be CFL-licensed in California?
Yes, with limited exceptions for federally chartered banks. If an online lender is making consumer loans to California residents at rates above the 10% constitutional usury cap, they generally need a CFL license. DFPI has stepped up enforcement against unlicensed online lenders since 2021.
Can I get a personal loan in California with bad credit?
Yes, though California’s 36% cap on $2,500–$10,000 loans means lenders are more selective with subprime borrowers than in uncapped states. Several network lenders work with scores starting at 580. Expect APRs at the higher end of the range for fair-to-poor credit.
How long is the shortest personal loan term in California?
Network partners offer minimum terms of 61 days. AB 539 also imposed minimum term requirements (typically 12 months for covered loans) to prevent the rate cap being evaded via ultra-short terms with high fees.
Sources & References
- California Financing Law (CFL) — Cal. Financial Code § 22000 et seq.
- Fair Access to Credit Act (AB 539) — Stats. 2019, Ch. 708
- California Consumer Financial Protection Law (CCFPL)
- Department of Financial Protection and Innovation — dfpi.ca.gov
- U.S. Census Bureau — California median household income $100,130 (2024 SAIPE)
- U.S. Census Bureau, 2024 ACS — California uninsured rate 5.9%
- Experian Consumer Credit Review — California average FICO 722
- Federal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit Report
- Military Lending Act, 10 U.S.C. § 987
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