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  • What is the Money Transmission Modernization Act (MTMA)

    Adytum AML Compliance Consultants

    How does the MTMA impact my Money Service Business or Fintech startup?

    As of January 2026 the MTMA has seen widespread adoption with some reports indicating over 40 states have enacted it in full or in part, representing nearly 99% of U.S. money transmission activity now aligned with its principles. While not all states adopt every provision identically the trend toward standardization is clear and accelerating; representing a significant advancement for regulatory clarity and uniformity across state money transmission regulators, who previously had unique requirements.

    The Money Transmission Modernization Act (MTMA), also sometimes known as the Model Money Transmission Modernization Act was developed by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors (CSBS) and establishes a set of nationwide standards for regulating money transmitters, aiming to replace outdated and inconsistent state laws with a more uniform and modern approach. The MTMA attempts to standardize money transmitter licensing requirements across states, including items like the minimum net worth, surety bonds and permissible investments for liquidity: 

    • Net worth thresholds are now scaled to a company’s transmission volume through tiered minimums that ensure financial stability without overly burdening smaller players
    • Surety bonds are now typically set at 100% of average daily money transmission liability in the state, with reasonable minimums and caps ranging from $100,000–$500,000 in many cases
    • Permissible investments rules, requiring licensees to hold liquid assets to back outstanding obligations and protect consumers.

    Other MTMA improvements include standardizing the licensing application processes, standard background checks for control persons, and risk-based supervision.

    The Act promotes use of the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System (NMLS) for centralized applications, document sharing, and coordination. It also includes optional provisions for virtual currency activities, clarifying when crypto-related transmission qualifies as money transmission but adoption of this provision varies by state. Additional exemptions for certain agents, payroll processors in some jurisdictions, or commercial transactions further aim to avoid over regulation.

    Huge Impacts for Fintech Startups and Money Services Businesses (MSBs)

    For fintech startups and MSBs like payment processors, digital wallets, remittance apps, and crypto platforms with fiat on/off-ramps: the MTMA represents a significant shift from the previous patchwork of forty-nine (49) divergent state regimes, Montana excluded. The old way necessarily required customizing applications, policies, bonds, and financials for each state, driving up costs, delays, and complexity; especially burdensome for resource constrained startups and small money transmitters in smaller markets. With more or less uniformity achieved across 40 US states, the possibilities are practically endless for fintechs, money transmitters and MSBs. Some of the immediately positive impacts for the Money Transmission industry are: 

    1. Reduced Compliance Burden and Costs.  Uniform requirements for net worth, surety bonds, and permissible investments mean less duplication. Startups can prepare one robust set of documents and adapt minimally per state, reducing legal and consulting fees for multi-state growth. Further, NMLS integration streamlines submissions, tracking, and renewals across jurisdictions, saving time and money for Compliance teams.
    2. Faster Market Entry and Scaling. With standardization across states, approval timelines can shorten MTL applications, critical for fintechs chasing network effects in payments, crypto and web3.
    3. Lower Barriers for Innovation.  Regulatory clarity reduces uncertainty and encourages experimentation all while still maintaining consumer protections against fraud, insolvency, and illicit finance. The MTMA accommodates digital innovations like peer-to-peer apps, stored-value products, and certain virtual currency activities. 
    4. Improved Banking and Partnership Access. Standardized compliance frameworks make fintechs, MSBs and money transmitters less risky and more attractive to banks.
    5. Consumer and Market Confidence. Improved consumer protections like better liquidity safeguards build consumer trust and benefiting startups that rely on user adoption.

    Challenges Remain

    Nuances persist as MTMA adoption is not completely uniform.  Some states tweak provisions, for example, choosing to exclude or include virtual currency definitions. Startups will still need state-specific diligence, especially in the 10 states that have yet to adopt. Initial transition costs still exist and smaller MSBs may face scaled requirements as volumes grow.

    Overall the MTMA transforms multi-state licensing from a major pain point into a more manageable foundation for regulation that will allow further industry growth. For fintech startups and MSBs, it lowers entry barriers, accelerates expansion, and shifts focus from navigation of regulatory uncertainty to product innovation and growth, ultimately turning compliance into a competitive advantage in a maturing payments ecosystem.

    Why Choose Adytum?

    At Adytum we don’t just check the compliance boxes, instead we build sustainable compliance frameworks that scale and enable robust business growth. Our hands-on experience includes managing independent compliance reviews, training teams in best practices, and successfully passing both federal and state examinations.

    Ready to elevate your compliance program and be adytum?  

    Drop us a line partner@beadytum.com

  • How to Obtain a Surety Bond as a Money Transmitter or New MSB

    Surety Bond: Core Requirement for MSBs pursing MTLs

    Surety bonds protect consumers by guaranteeing performance and covering losses resulting from a Money Transmitter’s default or from noncompliance. In 2026, most states require a continuous bond payable to the regulator, of varying amounts from a minimum of $25,000 up to $3,000,000 USD.

    Surety bond requirements for finch startups and MSBs vary on a state by state basis, but often follow MTMA guidelines: 100% of average daily money transmission liability in the state, or a minimum required amount in many MTMA states, some examples include:

    Georgia: Minimum $250,000.

    Oregon: $25,000 base + $5,000 per branch/agent, up to $150,000.

    – Some states scale to $2 million based on volume.

    Surety bonds are obtained from surety bonding companies, generally insurance agents also provide surety bonds, surety bond premiums may range from 1–3% of bond amount, depending on credit of the personal guarantor.

    Once your MSB has obtained a surety bond in the state, you will generally upload proof through the  NMLS as many states allow electronic bonds, otherwise a certified copy will be physically delivered to the regulator from the surety company. Once you’ve obtained the bond, be sure to  maintain coverage continuously for the duration of your money transmitter license as a lapse in coverage can trigger fines, suspension and even revocation.

    Why Choose Adytum?

    At Adytum we don’t just check the compliance boxes, instead we build sustainable compliance frameworks that scale and enable robust business growth. Our hands-on experience includes managing independent compliance reviews, training teams in best practices, and successfully passing both federal and state examinations.

    Ready to elevate your compliance program and be adytum?  Drop us a line partner@beadytum.com

    Adytum AML Compliance Consultants