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Private lenders often operate under a practical and widely shared assumption: if a loan is business purpose, short term, and made to a real estate investor, state licensing laws should not apply.
In some cases, that assumption is correct. In many others, it is not.
Unlike the consumer mortgage space, private lending sits in a patchwork of state laws that draw lines based on property type, borrower profile, frequency of lending, and even post-closing activities such as servicing or loan modifications. Because of that variability, lenders can unknowingly cross into licensable activity simply by expanding into a new state, slightly changing a loan product, or increasing origination volume.
The risk typically remains hidden while loans perform. It surfaces when a loan defaults, a foreclosure is contested, or an investor conducts diligence. At that point, a licensing defect can jeopardize enforceability, delay or derail foreclosure, and expose the lender to regulatory penalties and investor claims.
Business Purpose Is Not a Universal Exemption
Many states provide some form of exemption for business-purpose or commercial lending. However, those exemptions are far from uniform.
In several jurisdictions, loans secured by 1–4 unit residential property trigger licensing requirements regardless of whether the borrower is an investor and regardless of whether the borrower signs a business-purpose affidavit. Other states focus on the borrower rather than the collateral, scrutinizing loans to individuals even when they are secured by non-owner-occupied property.
In these scenarios, a lender that believed it was squarely in the commercial lane may find itself treated as an unlicensed consumer lender.
“Making a Loan” Is Broader Than Many Expect
Licensing exposure is not limited to directly originating loans.
Depending on the state, a lender may be deemed to be “engaged in the business of lending” by:
- Repeatedly funding loans through local brokers
- Table funding or otherwise being the true source of funds at closing
- Purchasing loans and then extending, renewing, or materially modifying them
- Servicing its own loans or conducting workout negotiations
- Actively marketing or soliciting loans in the state
A lender that considers itself a passive capital provider can still trigger licensing if its level of control or frequency of activity crosses the statutory threshold.
Enforceability Risk Is the Real Threat
The most significant consequence of unlicensed lending is not the fine. It is the risk that the loan becomes partially or wholly unenforceable.
Courts in some states have limited or denied a lender’s ability to collect contractual interest, default interest, or fees where the lender lacked the required license. In more extreme circumstances, borrowers have sought to void the obligation altogether or recover interest already paid.
Even when ultimate enforceability is preserved, the borrower’s ability to raise a licensing defect as a defense can substantially delay foreclosure and increase litigation costs. That delay erodes returns and creates leverage for distressed borrowers to force discounted resolutions.
Regulatory Action and Collateral Damage
State regulators may initiate investigations based on a single borrower complaint. Consequences can include:
- Cease-and-desist orders halting new originations
- Civil penalties assessed on a per-loan basis
- Required restitution of interest and fees
- Restrictions or complications in obtaining a future license
For private lenders that rely on warehouse lines, note buyers, or participation partners, a licensing problem can also trigger breaches of representations and warranties, leading to repurchase demands and strained capital relationships.
Common High-Risk Situations in Private Lending
Patterns that frequently lead to licensing exposure include:
- Fix-and-flip or bridge loans to individuals on 1–4 unit properties
- Lending into a new state without first analyzing that state’s commercial and residential regimes
- Advertising or holding out as a “nationwide” lender without state-level limitations
- Using in-house servicing teams to handle loans secured by property in multiple states
- Acquiring loans originated by others and then modifying or extending them
Each of these activities can independently trigger a licensing requirement even if the original origination appeared exempt.
Structural Workarounds Often Fail
Certain commonly used structures do not reliably avoid licensing:
- Lending through an LLC, fund, or special purpose vehicle
- Relying on a broker’s license while the capital source remains unlicensed
- Limiting volume but repeating transactions over time
- Purchasing rather than originating loans
Regulators and courts generally look to the substance of the activity and who is functionally acting as the lender, not the label applied to the entity.
Early Detection and Remediation Matter
A proactive, state-by-state licensing analysis tied to actual loan products and practices is critical for any private lender operating beyond a single jurisdiction.
When a potential issue is identified early, there may be options to mitigate exposure, such as pausing originations in a state, adjusting loan parameters, or obtaining the appropriate license before a default or regulatory inquiry occurs. Once a loan is in litigation or under investigation, those options narrow considerably.
Licensing as Strategic Risk Management
For private lenders, proper licensing is not simply a compliance exercise. It is asset protection.
A single unenforceable loan or stalled foreclosure can eliminate the profit from many successful transactions. Conversely, a well-structured, properly licensed multi-state platform enhances enforceability, preserves exit options, and increases investor confidence.
As private lending continues to scale nationally, licensing should be treated as a core component of growth strategy. Getting it right at the outset is significantly less costly than defending it after a loan goes bad.
Before expanding into a new state, or funding your next deal across state lines, make sure your licensing strategy matches your actual lending activity. A proactive, state-by-state licensing review can prevent costly enforcement issues, protect your foreclosure rights, and preserve the enforceability of your loans. Consulting Fortra Law before problems arise is far less expensive than litigating them.
Jennifer Young, Esq.
Partner at Fortra Law
Jennifer Young is a Partner and Attorney on the Corporate & Securities team at Fortra Law, specializing in real estate-focused private placements and alternative investments for private lenders, developers, and entrepreneurs. Jennifer advises on the formation of mortgage funds, real estate acquisition funds, syndications, REITs, and Qualified Opportunity Funds, and prepares private and public securities offerings in the U.S. and internationally. She also oversees the firm’s licensing division, advising on regulatory matters and managing licensing for commercial lenders, mortgage bankers, mortgage brokers, and real estate brokers nationwide.


