Digital Payments & Fintech · United States
Digital Payments & Fintech - United States
The United States operates a mature but highly fragmented payments licensing regime: digital payment firms must obtain state-level Money Transmitter Licenses in up to 49 jurisdictions and register federally with FinCEN as Money Services Businesses. There is no single federal payment institution or e-money license analogous to the EU's EMI framework; however, OCC special-purpose national trust bank charters are increasingly available to fintechs. As of mid-2026, a May 2026 Executive Order is accelerating federal regulatory reform to further integrate fintechs into banking and payment infrastructure.
Any firm transmitting money must obtain a Money Transmitter License (MTL) in each state where it operates (required in ~49 states plus DC; Montana has no MTL requirement). The CSBS Model Money Transmission Modernization Act (MTMA) — now adopted fully or partially by 31+ states — is harmonizing capital, surety bond, and permissible-investment standards across jurisdictions, with further state adoptions effective through 2026.
All Money Services Businesses (MSBs) — including money transmitters, currency exchangers, and issuers of prepaid instruments — must register with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) within 180 days of establishment and renew every two years. Operating without registration is a federal criminal offense under 18 U.S.C. § 1960, with penalties up to $250,000 and five years imprisonment.
The OCC offers special-purpose national trust bank charters to fintech and digital-asset firms, providing a federal pathway that preempts state-by-state licensing. Activity surged markedly: 14 de novo charter applications were filed in 2025, with multiple conditional approvals by early 2026. A May 19, 2026 White House Executive Order ("Integrating Financial Technology Innovation into Regulatory Frameworks") directs federal banking regulators to further reduce barriers for fintechs and crypto firms accessing the national payment infrastructure.
The CFPB finalized a Personal Financial Data Rights rule under Dodd-Frank §1033 in October 2024, mandating data portability for consumers. In October 2025, a federal court (E.D. Kentucky) enjoined enforcement pending CFPB reconsideration. The CFPB reopened rulemaking in August 2025, drawing ~14,000 public comments, and signaled it will issue a narrowed interim final rule. As of May 2026, the framework remains suspended and under revision.
Two real-time gross settlement rails operate in parallel: the Federal Reserve's FedNow (launched July 2023, ~1,500 participating institutions by mid-2025, transaction limit raised to $10 million in November 2025) and The Clearing House's RTP network. Participation is voluntary for depository institutions. The Fed issued a 2025 RFI on expanded "skinny" master-account access for fintechs and non-banks to Federal Reserve payment rails.
The CFPB withdrew its May 2024 interpretive rule applying Regulation Z (Truth in Lending Act) to BNPL products in May 2025, stating it will not prioritize enforcement, and confirmed in June 2025 it will not issue a revised federal BNPL rule. Regulation is shifting to states: New York enacted a BNPL licensing and supervisory framework in its FY 2026 budget, directing DFS to issue implementing regulations covering underwriting, disclosures, and data use.
Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/24/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →