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# Puerto Rico licensing laws

Authoritative summary of licensing requirements in Puerto Rico across regulated verticals: bond amounts, fee schedules, application timelines, renewal cadence, and the issuing regulator.

## Puerto Rico Debt Collection Laws & Regulations

Comprehensive guide to debt collection licensing requirements, regulations, and filing obligations in Puerto Rico. Learn about licensing fees, bond requirements, key statutes, and regulatory bodies governing third-party debt collectors in Puerto Rico.

**Direct answer:** Yes, Puerto Rico requires a debt collection license issued by Puerto Rico Department of Financial Regulation.

- **Regulator:** Puerto Rico Department of Financial Regulation
- **License required:** yes
- **Bond:** $10,000
- **Renewal cadence:** every 12 months
- **Official source:** https://www.pr.gov

### Fee schedule

| Fee | Amount |
| --- | --- |
| Annual Renewal | $250 |
| Application Fee | $250 |

### Application process

To obtain a debt collection license in Puerto Rico, applicants generally need to submit a completed application to the Puerto Rico regulatory authority, provide a surety bond of $10,000, pass background checks for all control persons, and meet net worth or financial requirements. The application review typically takes 30-90 days.

### Renewal

Debt collection licenses in Puerto Rico generally require annual renewal. Renewal generally involves submission of a renewal application, payment of renewal fees, updated surety bond confirmation, and any required annual reports. Late renewals may incur additional penalties.

### Key statutes

- **Puerto Rico Debt Collection Act** (PR Code), Primary statute governing debt collection in Puerto Rico

### Additional notes

Third-party debt collectors operating in Puerto Rico are also generally expected to comply with the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA). Puerto Rico may impose additional requirements beyond federal standards, including restrictions on communication methods, required disclosures, and limitations on fees that may be collected.

## Puerto Rico Lending Laws & Licensing Requirements

Guide to consumer and commercial lending licensing in Puerto Rico. Covers which loan products trigger a license, the state regulator, surety bond and net worth expectations, key statutes, and the application path for lenders operating in Puerto Rico.

**Direct answer:** Puerto Rico lending licensing depends on the specific activity; verify with Puerto Rico Office of the Commissioner of Financial Institutions (OCIF).

- **Regulator:** Puerto Rico Office of the Commissioner of Financial Institutions (OCIF)
- **License required:** varies
- **Bond:** Bond amount set by regulator (confirm with state)
- **Renewal cadence:** every 12 months
- **Official source:** https://www.pr.gov

### Application process

Lenders in Puerto Rico are generally licensed based on the loan product, the interest rate, the loan amount, and whether the borrower is a consumer or a business. Consumer lenders commonly apply to the Puerto Rico Office of the Commissioner of Financial Institutions (OCIF) for a consumer finance, small loan, installment loan, or supervised lender license, often through the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System (NMLS) where the state participates. Applications typically require a surety bond, financial statements, a minimum net worth, background checks for control persons, and disclosure of the lending products and rates offered. Commercial lending may be lighter touch, though a growing number of states require a license or specific disclosures for business-purpose financing. Confirm the exact license type and requirements with the regulator before lending.

### Renewal

Lending licenses in Puerto Rico generally renew on an annual cycle. Renewal commonly requires updated financial statements, confirmation of the surety bond, payment of renewal fees, and any required annual reports. States that use NMLS typically run renewal in the November to December window. Confirm the renewal cadence and fees with the regulator.

### Key statutes

- **Truth in Lending Act (Federal)** (15 U.S.C. § 1601), Federal disclosure framework for consumer credit, implemented through Regulation Z.
- **Equal Credit Opportunity Act (Federal)** (15 U.S.C. § 1691), Federal prohibition on discrimination in credit transactions, implemented through Regulation B.
- **Puerto Rico consumer lending and finance statutes** (PR Code), State statutes governing consumer lending, license categories, and rate authority in Puerto Rico; confirm the exact citation with the regulator.

### Additional notes

License type in Puerto Rico depends on the loan product, the rate charged, and the loan amount, so the same lender may need different licenses for different products. Lenders are also expected to comply with federal requirements including the Truth in Lending Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau oversight. This is a seeded baseline; confirm the specific license type, bond amount, fees, and statute citations with the Puerto Rico regulator before relying on it.

## Puerto Rico Money Transmitter Laws & Licensing

Complete guide to money transmitter licensing in Puerto Rico. Covers application requirements, surety bond amounts, net worth minimums, FinCEN registration, and key statutes governing money transmission in Puerto Rico.

**Direct answer:** Yes, Puerto Rico requires a money transmitter license issued by Puerto Rico Division of Banking.

- **Regulator:** Puerto Rico Division of Banking
- **License required:** yes
- **Bond:** $25,000
- **Minimum net worth:** $100,000
- **Renewal cadence:** every 12 months
- **Official source:** https://www.pr.gov

### Fee schedule

| Fee | Amount |
| --- | --- |
| Annual Renewal | $300-$1,000 |
| Application Fee | $500-$1,500 |
| Investigation Fee | $1,000-$5,000 |
| FinCEN Registration | $0 |

### Application process

To obtain a money transmitter license in Puerto Rico, applicants generally need to submit a completed application to the Puerto Rico Division of Banking, provide a surety bond of $25,000-$500,000, demonstrate minimum net worth of $100,000, provide audited financial statements, implement a comprehensive BSA/AML filings program, and pass background checks for all control persons. Many states now accept applications through NMLS. The application process typically takes 3-12 months depending on the state and complexity of the applicant's business model.

### Renewal

Money transmitter licenses in Puerto Rico generally require annual renewal. Renewal typically requires submission of audited financial statements, updated surety bond, quarterly or annual transaction reports, BSA/AML filing documentation, and payment of renewal fees. Some states require call report filings on a quarterly basis throughout the year.

### Key statutes

- **Puerto Rico Money Transmitter Act** (PR Code), State-specific money transmission regulation
- **Bank Secrecy Act (Federal)** (31 U.S.C. § 5311), Federal BSA/AML requirements for money services businesses

### Additional notes

Money transmitters operating in Puerto Rico are also generally expected to register with FinCEN as a money services business (MSB) and implement a comprehensive BSA/AML filings program. This includes appointing a filings officer, developing written policies and procedures, conducting employee training, filing Currency Transaction Reports (CTRs), and submitting Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs). Puerto Rico may have specific requirements for cryptocurrency and virtual currency businesses.

## Puerto Rico Mortgage Laws & Licensing Requirements

Complete guide to mortgage licensing requirements in Puerto Rico. Covers MLO licensing through NMLS, lender and servicer licensing, bond requirements, and key statutes governing mortgage origination and servicing in Puerto Rico.

**Direct answer:** Yes, Puerto Rico requires a mortgage license issued by Puerto Rico OCIF.

- **Regulator:** Puerto Rico OCIF
- **License required:** yes
- **Bond:** $10,000
- **Renewal cadence:** every 12 months
- **Official source:** https://www.pr.gov

### Fee schedule

| Fee | Amount |
| --- | --- |
| NMLS Processing | $100 |
| MLO Annual Renewal | $100-$300 |
| Annual Company Renewal | $300-$800 |
| MLO License Application | $200-$400 |
| Company License Application | $500-$1,000 |

### Application process

Mortgage companies generally apply through the NMLS (Nationwide Multistate Licensing System) for Puerto Rico mortgage licensing. Requirements include a completed MU1 form, surety bond, audited financial statements, business plan, background checks (FBI criminal and credit) for all control persons, and net worth requirements. Individual MLOs are generally required to complete pre-licensing education (20 hours minimum including 3 hours of federal law, 3 hours of ethics, 2 hours of non-traditional lending, plus Puerto Rico-specific hours), pass the SAFE MLO test, and submit an MU4 form through NMLS.

### Renewal

Mortgage licenses in Puerto Rico are renewed annually through NMLS. Company renewals require updated financial statements, bond confirmation, and payment of renewal fees. MLOs are generally required to complete continuing education (8 hours minimum annually, including Puerto Rico-specific requirements) and pay renewal fees through NMLS. The renewal period typically runs November 1 through December 31.

### Key statutes

- **SAFE Act (Federal)** (12 U.S.C. § 5101), Federal framework for MLO licensing through NMLS
- **Puerto Rico Mortgage Lending Act** (PR Code), State-specific mortgage lending and servicing regulation in Puerto Rico

### Additional notes

All mortgage companies and MLOs operating in Puerto Rico are generally required to be registered through NMLS. Puerto Rico participates in the CSBS multi-state licensing process. Additional requirements may include maintaining a physical office, appointing a qualified individual, and filings with both state and federal regulations including TILA, RESPA, and the Dodd-Frank Act.
