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# Bonds for lenders

How surety bonds attach to a lending license, why the amount varies, and what changes when you add states.

## What you will learn

- How lending bond amounts are typically set
- Why adding states stacks the bond portfolio
- What underwriting on a lending principal usually looks at

## Bonds attach to the license, not the company

Each lending license generally carries its own [[term:surety-bond]] requirement, written to that state's statutory form. The face amount is set by the state, often as a flat number, sometimes as a tier based on volume. A multi-state lender carries a portfolio of bonds, not a single master bond.

## Why the portfolio compounds

Every new state added to the footprint typically adds a bond, often with its own renewal date that does not line up with the existing portfolio. The administrative load of tracking and renewing bonds is one of the first things a growing lender outsources.

## Underwriting on the principal

Surety underwriting on a lending principal looks at the entity's financials, the credit of the [[term:control-person]] list, and the lending product itself. Higher-risk products and thinner balance sheets tend to translate into higher premiums on the same face amount.

Use the estimator below to size the portfolio quickly: pick the lending bond type, the states you operate in, and a credit range to see typical annual premiums.

[[tool:bond-cost-estimator]]

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## How to cite this page

Cite as: "Bonds for lenders." Covered by Cornerstone. https://coveredbycornerstone.com/education/industry/lending/lending-bonds

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