Washington · State Guide
Personal Loans in Washington: The 25% Cap and the New True-Lender Doctrine
Washington’s Consumer Loan Act has long capped non-bank consumer loans at 25% APR, but the 2024 Predatory Loan Prevention Act (SB 6025) made that cap meaningfully harder to evade. By codifying true-lender doctrine and applying it to fintech-bank partnerships, Washington became one of the most active enforcement environments in the country. Here’s how the framework works after the June 2024 amendments.
APR range (network)
6.99%–35.99%
25% APR
June 2024
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How Washington Regulates Personal Loans
Washington’s consumer lending framework is built on two complementary statutes. The Consumer Loan Act (CLA) at RCW Chapter 31.04 requires non-exempt lenders to obtain a license to make consumer loans of any amount, and caps finance charges at 25% APR. The general usury statute (RCW 19.52) sets a default ceiling of 12% per year, or 4% above the most recent 26-week Treasury auction yield, whichever is higher, for loans not subject to other frameworks.
The major recent change is SB 6025, the Predatory Loan Prevention Act, which Governor Inslee signed in 2024 and which took effect June 6, 2024. It amended the Consumer Loan Act to incorporate true-lender provisions that recharacterize certain non-exempt entities as the lender of record on loans where the named lender is a bank but the economic substance lies with a non-bank partner.
Washington Consumer Lending Framework
Provision
Rule
Authority
CLA finance charge cap
25% APR
RCW 31.04
General usury (default)
Greater of 12% or 4% over 26-week Treasury
RCW 19.52.020(1)
CLA license required
Any consumer loan with finance charge
RCW 31.04 (post-SB 6025)
True-lender provisions
Non-bank entity treated as lender if predominant economic interest
SB 6025 (eff. June 6, 2024)
Anti-evasion
Disguised loan structures and “totality of circumstances” capture
SB 6025
Source: RCW 31.04; RCW 19.52.020; Washington SB 6025 (2024). For current statutory text, see Washington Department of Financial Institutions. Network partners cap APRs at 35.99% nationwide, but in Washington, the operative ceiling for non-bank consumer loans is 25%.
Why SB 6025 matters
Before June 2024, fintech-bank partnerships used the bank’s federal preemption to charge Washington residents APRs above 25%, sometimes well above. SB 6025 codified the “true lender” test directly into Washington law, applying CLA licensing and rate cap obligations to any non-exempt entity that (i) acts as agent or service provider for an exempt lender related to a loan with APR above 25%, and (ii) holds the predominant economic interest in the loan, OR for which the totality of circumstances indicates non-bank lender status. The law also has explicit anti-evasion provisions targeting structures that “offer loans under the guise of personal property leases” or otherwise attempt regulatory arbitrage.
Washington Market: What Borrowers Should Know
Washington has one of the strongest tech-driven economies in the country, with the Seattle metro driving most of the state’s economic activity. The mix of high incomes (one of the highest in the U.S.), strong credit profiles, and the post-2024 enforcement environment makes Washington a competitive prime-credit market, but a more challenging one for subprime borrowers, since the 25% cap restricts how aggressively lenders can price risk.
$96,400
727
~6.0%
June 2024
Washington has no state income tax, which contributes to higher disposable income relative to states with comparable wages. Combined with high housing costs in the Puget Sound region, this produces a competitive but cost-aware lending market. Eastern Washington (Spokane, Tri-Cities, Yakima) and rural counties show different lending profiles than Seattle metro, generally more credit-mixed populations with higher uninsured rates.
Consumer Protections Specific to Washington
DFI license verification
The Washington Department of Financial Institutions (DFI) licenses Consumer Loan Act lenders. Verify any non-bank lender via dfi.wa.gov or the NMLS Consumer Access portal. Washington uses the National Mortgage Licensing System for consumer loan license verification, meaning you can check a lender’s status across multiple states from a single portal.
True-lender enforcement post-SB 6025
The June 2024 amendments fundamentally changed enforcement against bank-partnership models. Under the new framework, DFI can apply the CLA’s licensing and rate cap requirements to any non-bank entity that holds the predominant economic interest in a consumer loan above 25% APR, regardless of which entity appears as the named lender. This makes Washington one of the most aggressive enforcement environments for “rent-a-bank” arrangements, alongside Illinois and Connecticut.
Cease activity authority
DFI has been issuing cease-and-desist orders against unlicensed lenders since the early 2010s, with enforcement intensifying after the SB 6025 changes. Notable enforcement actions include orders against tribal lenders, online operators, and bank-partnership fintechs. Loans made in violation of the CLA can be voided, and unlicensed lenders may face license bars from operating in any capacity in Washington.
Military Lending Act
Washington hosts Joint Base Lewis-McChord (one of the largest military installations on the West Coast), Naval Base Kitsap, Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, Fairchild AFB, and several Coast Guard installations. Active-duty servicemembers and dependents are covered by the federal Military Lending Act (36% MAPR cap). Washington’s 25% CLA cap is more restrictive, meaning servicemembers receive the lower of the two ceilings.
Bank partnership caution
Despite SB 6025, some online lenders continue offering Washington residents APRs above 25% via bank-partnership structures. After June 2024, these arrangements face heightened scrutiny under the codified true-lender test. If you receive an offer above 25% APR from a non-bank online platform, even if the loan is “issued by” a federally chartered bank, verify carefully and consider whether the platform is the actual economic lender. Loans determined to violate Washington’s CLA may be unenforceable under state law.
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Note: APR slider in this calculator caps at 24.99% reflecting Washington’s 25% Consumer Loan Act ceiling.
Common Uses for Personal Loans in Washington
Home improvement
Significant in older Seattle, Tacoma, and Spokane neighborhoods, plus Pacific Northwest weatherization upgrades.
Debt consolidation
Most common loan purpose, particularly relevant in greater Seattle and Bellevue where housing-driven credit balances accumulate.
Tech-sector cash flow
Stock vesting cliffs and contractor income gaps drive moderate demand for bridge financing in the Seattle metro.
Auto-related expenses
Major repairs or down payments, particularly relevant in suburban King County and exurban areas with long commutes.
Wildfire and storm recovery
Eastern Washington wildfire seasons have driven recurring insurance gap loans, especially in Chelan, Okanogan, and Yakima counties.
What Lenders in Our Network Look For
Typically $800/month minimum from verifiable sources.
All credit types considered. WA's high average score (727) makes it a competitive prime market with some of the lowest excellent-credit APRs in the country.
Usually below 45–50%; Seattle metro borrowers may face stricter DTI underwriting due to high housing costs.
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.
Washington-Specific FAQ
What is the maximum APR on a personal loan in Washington?
For licensed Consumer Loan Act lenders, 25% APR. The general usury statute caps non-CLA loans at the greater of 12% or 4% above the latest 26-week Treasury auction yield. Federally chartered banks operate under separate authority, but post-SB 6025, non-bank entities partnering with banks may be recharacterized as the true lender and required to comply with the CLA’s 25% cap.
What did SB 6025 actually change?
SB 6025, effective June 6, 2024, codified the “true lender” doctrine into Washington law. Before SB 6025, the CLA didn’t require a license to solicit, broker, arrange, or purchase non-mortgage consumer loans, meaning fintechs could partner with banks and avoid licensing. After SB 6025, non-exempt entities that hold the predominant economic interest in a consumer loan above 25% APR (or where totality of circumstances indicates non-bank lender status) are subject to CLA licensing and rate cap requirements.
Are payday loans legal in Washington?
Yes, but heavily regulated under separate Small Loan Act provisions. Maximum loan amount is $700 or 30% of gross monthly income, with strict limits on rollovers, fees, and concurrent loans. APRs are capped at the equivalent of 15% of the loan amount, plus a small fee, substantially lower than payday APRs in unregulated states but still expensive on an annualized basis. Personal installment loans from CLA-licensed lenders at or below 25% APR are generally a much better option for borrowers facing short-term cash needs.
Can I get a personal loan in Washington with bad credit?
Yes, but options are more limited than in less-regulated states. The 25% CLA cap restricts how aggressively lenders can price subprime risk. Some network lenders work with credit scores starting at 580. Washington credit unions widely offer Payday Alternative Loans (PALs) at 28% APR, though the WA 25% cap is more restrictive than the federal NCUA PAL ceiling.
What happens if a lender violates Washington's lending laws?
DFI can issue cease-and-desist orders, revoke licenses, and pursue civil penalties. Loans made in violation of the CLA may be unenforceable under Washington case law. Borrowers can file complaints directly with DFI, which has been active in enforcement actions, particularly post-SB 6025 against bank-partnership structures determined to evade state law.
Sources & References
- Washington Consumer Loan Act, RCW Chapter 31.04
- Washington General Usury Statute, RCW 19.52
- Washington Senate Bill 6025 (2024), Predatory Loan Prevention Act
- Washington Department of Financial Institutions, dfi.wa.gov
- Mayer Brown analysis, “Significant True Lender Changes to Washington Consumer Loan Act” (2024)
- Sheppard Mullin analysis, Washington SB 6025 enforcement framework (2024)
- U.S. Census Bureau, Washington median household income (2024 ACS)
- Experian Consumer Credit Review, WA average FICO 727
- Federal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit Report
- Military Lending Act, 10 U.S.C. § 987
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