Michigan · State Guide
Personal Loans in Michigan: The 1939 Regulatory Loan Act That Still Defines Consumer Lending
Michigan’s consumer lending framework rests on two interlocking statutes: the Regulatory Loan Act of 1939, one of the oldest active consumer lending laws in the country, and the Credit Reform Act, which caps regulated lender APRs at 25%. Combined with a strict 25% criminal usury threshold and active DIFS oversight, Michigan operates one of the most stable lending environments in the Midwest.
APR range (network)
6.99%–35.99%
25% APR
25% APR
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How Michigan Regulates Personal Loans
Michigan’s consumer lending framework is built on two foundational statutes that work together. The Regulatory Loan Act of 1939 (Act 21 of 1939, MCL 493.1 et seq.) requires anyone in the business of making consumer loans up to a statutory ceiling to obtain a license. The Credit Reform Act of 1995 (MCL 445.1851 et seq.) then sets the actual rate framework, under MCL 445.1854, a regulated lender may charge no more than 25% APR for an extension of credit.
Both statutes are administered by the Michigan Department of Insurance and Financial Services (DIFS), specifically through its Office of Consumer Finance, which oversees over 13,000 mortgage and consumer finance entities operating in Michigan. The 25% cap aligns with Michigan’s criminal usury threshold under MCL 438.41, making rates above 25% potentially prosecutable as a felony with up to 5 years’ imprisonment or $10,000 fine.
Michigan Consumer Lending Framework
Provision
Rate
Authority
Default civil usury (no written agreement)
5% APR
MCL 438.31
Civil usury (with written agreement)
7% APR
MCL 438.31
Regulated lender cap
25% APR
MCL 445.1854 (Credit Reform Act)
Criminal usury threshold
25% APR
MCL 438.41 — felony, up to 5 years
Loan processing fee cap (CPI-adjusted)
$400 (2024–2025)
MCL 493.13(4)
Source: Michigan Compiled Laws, Chapters 438, 445, and 493. For current statutory text and licensee directories, see Michigan DIFS. Network partners cap APRs at 35.99% nationwide — but in Michigan, the operative ceiling for non-bank consumer loans is 25%.
The Soaring Pine Capital ruling, usury savings clauses no longer protect Michigan lenders
In a recent Michigan Supreme Court decision (Soaring Pine Capital), the court held that “usury savings clauses”, provisions in loan contracts stating that the contract should be interpreted to comply with usury limits, are unenforceable when they nullify the statutory remedy for usury. This is a significant shift. Lenders historically relied on these clauses to insulate themselves from usury liability even when face-of-the-loan rates exceeded legal limits. After Soaring Pine Capital, Michigan courts will void facially usurious loans regardless of any “savings” language. Among other consequences: loans charging above 25% may forfeit not just interest but also fees, attorney fees, and costs.
Michigan Market: What Borrowers Should Know
Michigan’s economy has historically been dominated by Detroit-area manufacturing, auto, parts, and related industries, but has diversified significantly with the growth of healthcare and tech sectors in Grand Rapids, Ann Arbor, and Lansing. The lending market reflects this regional split: significant prime-credit demand near university towns, mixed credit profiles in industrial cities, and a meaningful seasonal lending market in the Upper Peninsula.
$72,500
718
~5.0%
13,000+
Michigan expanded Medicaid in 2014, contributing to one of the lowest uninsured rates in the country. This affects loan demand: medical-purpose personal loans are less common in Michigan than in non-expansion states. Combined with the 25% rate cap, Michigan’s market features fewer subprime small-dollar loan products than less-regulated peer states.
Consumer Protections Specific to Michigan
DIFS license verification
Verify any non-bank lender via DIFS’ online licensee search or by calling 877-999-6442. Michigan DIFS oversees Regulatory Loan Act licensees, Consumer Financial Services Act licensees, and lenders under several other consumer finance statutes. If a non-bank lender is offering you a personal loan and isn’t licensed by DIFS, the loan may be unenforceable under Michigan law.
Payday lending exists but is heavily restricted
Unlike most strict-cap states, Michigan does technically permit deferred presentment service transactions (“payday loans”) under Public Act 244 of 2005, but they’re heavily restricted. Loans are capped at $600 in principal, only one outstanding loan at a time, and there’s a mandatory 7-day cooling-off period after seven consecutive loans. Despite these restrictions, payday loan APRs in Michigan can still reach into the triple digits because of fee structures, making personal installment loans from regulated lenders generally a much better option for borrowers facing short-term cash needs.
Strong remedies for usury violations
Michigan provides unusually strong remedies for usury violations. A lender found to have charged a civilly usurious rate is prohibited from collecting any interest, fees, attorneys’ fees, or costs, and the borrower can recover their own attorney fees and costs from the lender. Criminally usurious loans (above 25%) carry up to 5 years’ imprisonment and $10,000 fines.
Military Lending Act
Michigan hosts Selfridge Air National Guard Base, the U.S. Coast Guard’s Sault Ste. Marie installation, and several reserve components. Active-duty servicemembers and dependents are covered by the federal Military Lending Act, capping most consumer APRs at 36% all-in. In Michigan, however, the state’s 25% cap is more restrictive than the federal MLA.
Online lender caution
Some online lenders attempt to charge Michigan residents APRs above 25% by claiming federal preemption through partnerships with out-of-state banks. The legal validity of these arrangements is contested, and after the Soaring Pine Capital ruling, Michigan courts have been particularly skeptical of structures that effectively evade state usury limits. Before signing any loan above 25% APR in Michigan, verify whether the actual lender is a federally chartered bank with rate exportation authority, and understand that even then, the arrangement may be challenged.
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Note: APR slider in this calculator caps at 24.99% reflecting Michigan’s 25% regulated lender ceiling under the Credit Reform Act.
Common Uses for Personal Loans in Michigan
Home improvement
Michigan's older housing stock and harsh winters drive significant home repair lending, especially for roofing, HVAC, and basement repairs.
Debt consolidation
Most common loan purpose statewide; particularly relevant in metro Detroit, Grand Rapids, and Lansing.
Heating costs
Michigan winters drive significant LIHEAP demand, but personal loans sometimes bridge gaps for households just above the income limits.
Auto-related expenses
Major repairs or down payments, particularly relevant in a state where automotive ownership is essentially required outside major metros.
Manufacturing layoff bridging
Michigan's auto sector still produces periodic layoffs; personal loans sometimes bridge income gaps before unemployment processing.
What Lenders in Our Network Look For
Typically $800/month minimum from verifiable sources.
All credit types considered. Michigan's 25% cap means lenders here are more selective with deep subprime borrowers than in less-regulated states, but the 718 average credit score makes it a competitive prime market.
Usually below 45–50%.
For ACH funding and repayment.
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.
Michigan-Specific FAQ
What is the maximum APR on a personal loan in Michigan?
For regulated lenders under the Credit Reform Act, 25% APR. Charging 25% or more triggers Michigan’s criminal usury statute (MCL 438.41), a felony with up to 5 years’ imprisonment. Federally chartered banks may operate under separate authority. Network partners cap APRs at 35.99% nationwide, but in Michigan you will not see partner offers above 24.99%.
Are payday loans legal in Michigan?
Yes, but heavily restricted. Loans are capped at $600 principal under Public Act 244 of 2005, with only one outstanding loan permitted at a time, no rollovers, and a mandatory 7-day cooling-off period after seven consecutive loans. Despite these restrictions, payday loan APRs in Michigan can reach into the triple digits. A personal installment loan from a regulated lender at or below 25% APR is generally a much better option.
What is the Soaring Pine Capital ruling and how does it affect borrowers?
In Soaring Pine Capital, the Michigan Supreme Court held that “usury savings clauses”, contract provisions stating that any usurious rate should be reduced to the legal maximum, are unenforceable when they would nullify the statutory remedies for usury. This means that a facially usurious Michigan loan can be voided regardless of any savings language. Borrowers in disputes over usurious loans now have stronger legal positions than before the ruling.
Can I get a personal loan in Michigan with bad credit?
Yes, but options are more limited than in less-regulated states. The 25% rate ceiling restricts how aggressively lenders can price subprime risk. Some network lenders work with credit scores starting at 580. Credit unions often offer Payday Alternative Loans (PALs) capped at 28% to members, though MI’s 25% statutory cap is more restrictive.
What happens if a lender charges me more than 25% APR in Michigan?
Civilly usurious loans (above the 25% Credit Reform Act cap but below the criminal threshold) lose the right to collect interest, fees, and attorney fees, and the borrower can recover their own attorney fees from the lender. Criminally usurious loans (above 25%) can result in up to 5 years’ imprisonment for the lender, and the loan may be voided entirely. Report violations to DIFS or consult a consumer finance attorney.
Sources & References
- Michigan Regulatory Loan Act of 1939 — MCL 493.1 et seq.
- Michigan Credit Reform Act — MCL 445.1851 et seq.; specifically MCL 445.1854 (rate cap)
- Michigan civil usury statutes — MCL 438.31 et seq.
- Michigan criminal usury statute — MCL 438.41
- Michigan Department of Insurance and Financial Services (DIFS) — michigan.gov/difs
- Soaring Pine Capital Real Estate & Debt Fund II, LLC v. Park Street Group Realty Services, LLC (Michigan Supreme Court ruling on usury savings clauses)
- U.S. Census Bureau — Michigan median household income (2024 ACS)
- Experian Consumer Credit Review — Michigan average FICO 718
- Federal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit Report
- Military Lending Act, 10 U.S.C. § 987
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