Pawn Shop Loan Calculator 2026 | Renewal, Redemption & True APR
Underwrite your short-term collateral loan before handing over your valuables. This analyzer calculates your true Net Cash Released (after upfront deductions), models your monthly finance charges and storage fees, and calculates the exact cost of redemption or renewal. Compare your Effective Annual Percentage Rate (APR) against payday and title loans to ensure you are making the safest liquidity decision under current Truth in Lending Act (TILA) standards.
Enter item value, loan terms, deduction rules, and renewal assumptions to compare redeeming, renewing, or partially paying down your pawn loan.
| Metric | Result | Meaning |
|---|
How Our Underwriting Engine Models Short-Term Pawn Debt
This analyzer models the real financial mechanics of a pawn loan from first dollar borrowed to final redemption or forfeiture — including upfront deductions, monthly renewal costs, partial principal paydowns, and a side-by-side comparison against an alternate short-term borrowing option. Here is exactly what every input does, how each calculation is performed, and what each output means.
Every calculation in this tool flows from these eight inputs. Getting them right — especially the deduction type and monthly rate — determines whether your cash-in-hand and total cost figures are accurate.
- Item Value ($) The pawn shop’s appraised or agreed resale value of the collateral. Not the retail price — the liquidation value the operator assigns. This sets the ceiling for the loan amount.
- Loan-to-Value % (LTV) The percentage of item value the pawnbroker advances as a loan. US pawn shops typically advance 25–55% of appraised value. A $1,200 item at 55% LTV = $660 loan principal.
- Monthly Interest Rate % The stated monthly interest charged on the outstanding principal. US state law caps vary widely — from 2%/month (Oregon) to 25%/month (some states). This is applied to the outstanding balance each month.
- Monthly Service Fee ($) A fixed dollar fee charged monthly in addition to interest — storage, handling, or insurance. Common in states that cap interest but allow separate fee structures. Directly increases effective APR.
- Advance Deduction Type Controls how much cash you actually receive. “Interest deducted upfront” means the first month’s interest is subtracted before you receive the loan. “Both” deducts interest + service fee — significantly reducing cash-in-hand on small loans.
- Redemption Month The month number (1–24) when you plan to fully redeem the item by paying principal + all accrued costs. The tool calculates cumulative cost through this month.
- Number of Renewals How many times you plan to pay interest-only (or interest + partial principal) to extend the loan without redeeming. Each renewal keeps the collateral in the shop but resets the interest clock.
- Partial Principal Paydown ($) An optional amount paid against principal at each renewal in addition to the interest due. Reduces the outstanding balance, shortens time to positive equity, and lowers future month costs.
The second input card benchmarks your pawn loan against an alternate short-term borrowing source and adds an operator disclosure view showing the store’s revenue per transaction.
- Alternate Loan APR % The annualized percentage rate of the comparison loan — payday loan (~390% typical), title loan (~100–300%), or personal loan (~10–36%). Used to calculate the alternate loan’s total cost for the same borrowed amount and holding period.
- Alternate Loan Term (days) The holding period for the alternate loan in days — typically 14 days (payday) or 30 days (title/personal). Combined with APR, this determines the dollar cost of the alternate option.
- Alternate Loan Flat Fee ($) Any origination or transaction fee charged by the alternate lender. Added to the APR-based cost to produce a total comparable dollar figure for the comparison output.
- State / Jurisdiction Selects state-specific pawn law disclosures — redemption period requirements, interest rate caps, required disclosure language, and forfeiture rules. Used in the Operator Disclosure view.
- Operator Margin % The pawn store’s estimated profit margin on forfeited collateral resale. Combined with loan fee revenue, this builds the Operator Revenue Summary showing total store earnings per transaction across redeem / renew / forfeit outcomes.
Toggling the Operator view switches the output from the borrower’s perspective to the store operator’s perspective — showing interest income, fee income, forfeiture resale profit, and total revenue per transaction. This is designed for compliance officers, store owners building rate cards, and state regulators reviewing disclosure requirements.
The cash-in-hand you actually receive depends on the deduction type selected. The gross loan amount is always Item Value × LTV%. What you pocket depends on what the shop deducts upfront.
Principal = Item Value × (LTV ÷ 100)
Interest₁ = Principal × (Rate ÷ 100)Fee₁ = Monthly Service Fee
Cash = Principal − Interest₁ (if deducted) − Fee₁ (if deducted)
The redemption cost is the total cash required to get your item back at any given month. It includes outstanding principal (reduced by any paydowns), all interest accrued, and all service fees accumulated since the loan began.
Balance(n) = Principal − (Paydown × Renewals made)
Interest(n) = Balance(n) × Rate × n
Redeem(n) = Balance(n) + Interest(n) + (Fee × n)
The stated monthly interest rate dramatically understates the true annualized cost of a pawn loan because it does not include service fees or the impact of upfront deductions. This tool calculates and displays the true Effective APR so you can compare it against any other borrowing option on an apples-to-apples basis.
r_monthly = (Interest + Fee) ÷ Balance(n)
APR = r_monthly × 12 × 100
Cost/$100 = (Total Fees ÷ Cash Released) × 100
After you click Calculate, the results panel displays these key metrics. Each is defined below so you know exactly what you are reading.
The verdict banner at the top of the results panel gives you an instant green, amber, or red signal based on three financial thresholds applied to your inputs.
This table summarizes when each of the three outcomes makes financial sense based on cost ratios, item value, and time horizon. Use it alongside the calculator output to frame your decision.
| Outcome | Best When | Watch Out For | Typical Effective APR Range | Verdict Signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🟢 Redeem Early (Month 1–2) | Item has high personal/resale value; short-term cash gap only; renewal cost > 10% of principal | Upfront deductions reduce cash-in-hand on very short holds — costs more per day than it appears | 100–180% | Green |
| 🟡 Renew with Partial Paydown | Cannot redeem fully yet; partial paydown reduces balance each cycle; item value well above loan | Fee accumulation; each renewal payment is sunk cost — does not reduce principal unless paydown is included | 150–280% | Amber |
| 🟡 Renew Interest-Only | Holding an item with strong personal value; short bridge period before cash is available | Principal never reduces; cumulative cost grows linearly; easy to lose track of total paid | 144–360%+ | Amber → Red |
| 🔴 Forfeit (Allow Lapse) | Item value is close to or less than redemption cost; item has no personal value; alternate replacement is cheap | You lose the item permanently; any equity in item value above loan is surrendered to the store | N/A — no further cost | Red |
| 🔵 Switch to Alternate Loan | Alternate loan APR produces materially lower total cost for the same holding period | Alternate loan may require credit check; pawn is no-credit-check by nature — that has value for some borrowers | Varies by alternate | Amber / Red |
Evaluating Short-Term Liquidity: Pawn vs. Alternatives
Each example below uses real 2026 US pawn shop rates, typical state fee structures, and authentic borrower scenarios. Run the same numbers in the calculator above to see how your inputs change the verdict, the effective APR, and the true cost per $100 borrowed.
Marcus, 32, needs $400 fast for a car repair. His local Texas pawn shop appraises his Gibson Les Paul at $900 and offers 50% LTV. Texas allows up to 240% APR on pawn loans. He plans to redeem in month 2 after his next two paychecks clear.
| Input | Value |
|---|---|
| Item Value | $900 |
| LTV % | 50% |
| Loan Principal | $450 |
| Monthly Rate | 20% |
| Monthly Service Fee | $10 |
| Deduction Type | Interest upfront |
| Cash in Hand | $360 |
| Renewals | 1 |
| Redemption Month | 2 |
Diana, 41, uses her engagement ring to bridge a 3-week cash gap before a freelance payment arrives. California caps pawn interest at 2.5%/month plus a $10 service charge. She intends to redeem in month 1 — one of the best-case pawn loan scenarios in the US.
| Input | Value |
|---|---|
| Item Value | $4,500 |
| LTV % | 40% |
| Loan Principal | $1,800 |
| Monthly Rate | 2.5% |
| Monthly Service Fee | $10 |
| Deduction Type | No upfront deduction |
| Cash in Hand | $1,800 |
| Renewals | 0 |
| Redemption Month | 1 |
Tyler, 26, pawns his PS5 bundle for quick cash in Miami. Florida allows up to 25%/month on small pawn loans. He renews interest-only four times, always planning to redeem “next month.” This example shows how repeat interest-only renewals silently drain money while the item never comes home.
| Input | Value |
|---|---|
| Item Value | $700 |
| LTV % | 45% |
| Loan Principal | $315 |
| Monthly Rate | 25% |
| Monthly Service Fee | $15 |
| Deduction Type | Both upfront |
| Cash in Hand | $221.25 |
| Renewals | 4 |
| Partial Paydown | $0 |
| Redemption Month | 5 |
Rachel, 38, pawns her Rolex in Columbus for a business cash gap. Ohio caps pawn at 6%/month. She makes $200 principal paydowns at each renewal, systematically reducing her balance. She compares this against a payday loan at 391% APR — Ohio’s typical payday rate before the 2023 rate cap changes.
| Input | Value |
|---|---|
| Item Value | $8,500 |
| LTV % | 50% |
| Loan Principal | $4,250 |
| Monthly Rate | 6% |
| Monthly Service Fee | $20 |
| Deduction Type | No upfront deduction |
| Cash in Hand | $4,250 |
| Renewals | 3 |
| Partial Paydown / Renewal | $200 |
| Redemption Month | 4 |
| Alternate Loan APR | 60% (OH cap) |
| Alternate Loan Flat Fee | $50 |
James, 29, pawns his MacBook Pro in Las Vegas when his income drops between gig jobs. Nevada allows 13%/month. He renews six times with zero paydown — unable to redeem. By month 7 the redemption cost exceeds what he originally received, and by month 9 it approaches the item’s market value. This example shows the full financial destruction of long-term, no-paydown pawn renewals.
| Input | Value |
|---|---|
| Item Value | $2,800 |
| LTV % | 45% |
| Loan Principal | $1,260 |
| Monthly Rate | 13% |
| Monthly Service Fee | $20 |
| Deduction Type | Interest upfront |
| Cash in Hand | $1,076 |
| Renewals | 6 |
| Partial Paydown | $0 |
| Redemption Month | 7 |
| Alternate Loan APR | 36% (personal loan) |
| Alternate Flat Fee | $40 |
Pro Consumer Tips: Protecting Your Collateral
Whether you are walking into a pawn shop for the first time or running one, the same five principles determine whether the transaction ends well or becomes a financial trap. These tips are drawn from real US pawn industry data, state regulatory filings, and consumer finance research.
The monthly interest rate on the ticket is not the real cost of borrowing. Service fees, upfront deductions, and the compounding effect of renewals push the true annualized cost far higher. A 10%/month loan sounds manageable — but 10% × 12 months = 120% APR before any fees. With a $15 service fee on a $300 loan, effective APR can exceed 180%.
Monthly all-in rate = (Interest + Fee) ÷ PrincipalEffective APR = Monthly rate × 12 × 100
- Use the calculator on this page to compute effective APR from the ticket’s stated rate + fees before signing
- Ask the pawnbroker to disclose the total redemption cost at month 1, 2, and 3 in writing — they are required to under TILA in most states
- Don’t compare pawn loans by monthly rate alone — always compare by total dollar cost for your expected holding period
- A loan with a lower monthly rate but a high flat fee can cost more total than a higher-rate loan with no fee — especially on small principals
Most pawn borrowers pay interest-only at renewals, treating it like a storage fee. This is the most expensive mistake in pawn borrowing — every interest-only renewal payment is 100% sunk cost with zero reduction in what you owe to get your item back. Even a small paydown at each renewal transforms the trajectory of your loan.
| Strategy | Monthly Rate | Paydown/Cycle | Balance at Mo. 4 | Total Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interest-Only | 12% | $0 | $660 | $481 |
| $50 Paydown | 12% | $50 | $510 | $441 |
| $100 Paydown | 12% | $100 | $360 | $381 |
| $200 Paydown | 12% | $200 | $60 | $261 |
Based on $660 principal, $10/month service fee, redeemed at month 4. Total cost = all renewal payments + final redemption amount.
- At each renewal, pay at least 10–15% of the principal in addition to interest — even $50 on a $300 loan saves money long-term
- Ask the pawnbroker to confirm the updated principal balance on the ticket after each paydown
- Don’t let the pawnbroker apply your extra payment to fees before principal — specify “principal paydown” verbally and in writing
Most borrowers accept the first LTV offer without negotiating — but pawn shops routinely adjust advance ratios for regular customers, high-quality collateral, or larger loan amounts. A 5-percentage-point LTV improvement on a $1,200 item translates directly into more cash in hand at the same total cost. Separately, before entering any pawn shop, a 60-second check of your credit union’s personal loan rate can save hundreds of dollars.
At 40% LTV → $480 loanAt 50% LTV → $600 loan (+$120 cash)At 55% LTV → $660 loan (+$180 cash)Same interest rate — more money for same cost
- Bring a printed comparable sale (eBay sold listings, Reverb, Chrono24) showing your item’s current market value — most shops will negotiate LTV upward with evidence
- Ask: “What LTV do you offer for repeat customers?” — loyalty often gets 5–10% more advance
- Don’t accept the first offer on items with strong, verifiable resale markets (jewelry, watches, name-brand electronics)
A credit union personal loan at 12–18% APR on the same amount over the same period costs a fraction of even a low-rate pawn loan. The pawn loan’s unique advantage is that it requires no credit check and no income verification. If you qualify for a personal loan — even at a moderately high rate — run the alternate loan comparison in this calculator before pawning. The alternate almost always wins beyond month 2.
| Lender Type | Typical APR | Credit Check? | Same-Day? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Credit Union | 8–18% | Yes | Sometimes |
| Online Personal Loan | 10–36% | Yes | Yes (many) |
| Bank Personal Loan | 12–25% | Yes | Rare |
| Payday Loan | 390%+ | No | Yes |
| Pawn Loan (CA) | 30–50% | No | Yes |
| Pawn Loan (TX/FL) | 150–400% | No | Yes |
Federal Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and state pawn disclosure laws require operators to disclose the total cost of credit in APR terms for loans above certain thresholds. Operators who structure rates and fees without modeling the effective APR risk regulatory exposure — and more importantly, set rates that are economically indefensible to regulators when audited.
- Model every proposed rate + fee combination through an effective APR calculation before putting it on your rate card — know your number before a regulator asks
- Document your state’s specific TILA exemption thresholds — pawn loans below $25,000 may be subject to federal disclosure rules in addition to state pawn law
- Give every borrower a written redemption schedule at loan inception showing total redemption cost at months 1, 2, and 3 — this pre-empts disputes and builds trust
- Don’t rely on the “pawn exemption” from TILA without confirming your state’s specific statutory language — exemption scope varies widely
- States are actively updating pawn rate cap legislation — Ohio, Illinois, and Virginia all changed their pawn lending rules between 2022 and 2025. Review your rate card annually.
Most pawn operators optimize for renewal volume — maximizing the number of interest payments collected before redemption or forfeiture. This is a short-term revenue model. Operators who offer structured partial paydown incentives retain customers longer, reduce default/forfeiture rates, improve regulatory standing, and generate better lifetime customer value than pure renewal-maximization strategies.
| Outcome | Operator Revenue | Customer Outcome | Repeat Customer? | Regulatory Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early Redemption (Mo. 1) | Low — 1 cycle fee | Best | High | Low |
| Renewal × 2 + Redemption | Medium — 3 cycles | Good | High | Low |
| Renewal × 4 + Redemption | High — 5 cycles | Costly | Medium | Medium |
| Renewal × 6 + Forfeiture | High + resale margin | Worst | Low | High |
| Paydown Program × 3 Cycles | Medium-High | Good | Highest | Lowest |
- Offer a “Paydown Incentive” — waive the service fee for any renewal month in which the customer makes a principal paydown above 10% of the outstanding balance
- Train staff to proactively offer the partial paydown option at renewal — most customers don’t know it is available unless asked
- Track “Redemption Rate by Loan Age” as a KPI — industry average redemption rate is 70–80%; operators below 60% have a forfeiture problem, not a revenue strategy
- Don’t build a business model dependent on forfeiture resale margin — resale prices fluctuate, and high forfeiture rates attract regulatory attention
Monthly rate × 12 ≠ effective APR once fees and upfront deductions are included. Always compute effective APR = (Interest + Fee) ÷ Principal × 12 × 100 before committing to any pawn loan.
Interest-only renewals are 100% sunk cost. Even $50–$100 paid against principal at each renewal cycle meaningfully reduces your outstanding balance and total redemption cost by month 3–4.
LTV is negotiable for strong collateral. A 5% LTV improvement on a $1,200 item = $60 more cash at the same total cost. Always check your credit union’s personal loan rate before pawning — it beats pawn APR in most scenarios beyond month 2.
TILA and state pawn laws require APR disclosure in many states. Model every rate + fee combination through an effective APR calculation before putting it on your rate card. Document annually as state laws change.
Operators who offer paydown incentives (e.g., waived service fee for cycles with 10%+ principal paydown) see higher redemption rates, stronger repeat business, and lower regulatory risk than operators who maximize pure renewal volume. Target a redemption rate above 75% — the national top-quartile benchmark.
Pawn Loans FAQs: Credit Checks, Stolen Goods & Default Regulations
Comprehensive answers regarding collateral safety, Truth in Lending Act (TILA) guidelines, credit reporting, and loan mechanics.
Related Short-Term Debt & Personal Finance Calculators
These tools from USFinanceCalculators.com work alongside the Pawn Loan Analyzer to help you model the full picture — from comparing alternate short-term loan costs to managing credit, building an emergency fund, and planning your next financial move after redeeming or forfeiting collateral.
CFPB Compliance, Legal Disclaimer & Editorial Transparency
No financial advice. Nothing on this page or produced by this calculator constitutes personalized financial advice, investment advice, credit counseling, or a recommendation to enter into any financial transaction. The outputs are mathematical estimates only.
No guarantee of accuracy. While we make every effort to ensure calculations are correct, USFinanceCalculators.com makes no warranty — express or implied — regarding the accuracy, completeness, or fitness for purpose of any output. Pawn loan structures, state rate caps, and fee schedules change frequently. Always verify against your actual loan agreement.
No lender relationship. USFinanceCalculators.com is not a lender, broker, credit counselor, or financial institution. We do not match users with lenders, earn referral fees from lenders, or facilitate loan transactions of any kind.
State law variation. Pawn lending is regulated at the state level in the United States. Interest rate caps, maximum loan-to-value ratios, required disclosure language, redemption period minimums, and forfeiture rules differ significantly across all 50 states and the District of Columbia. This tool does not constitute legal advice regarding applicable law in your jurisdiction.
Estimated verdicts. The green / amber / red decision verdict is a heuristic output based on user-defined APR threshold inputs. It is not a credit decision, a suitability determination, or a recommendation. The same scenario may be appropriate or inappropriate for different borrowers depending on individual financial circumstances.
All calculations run in your browser. Every number you enter into this tool — item value, loan rate, income, fees — is processed entirely in JavaScript on your device. No input data is transmitted to our servers, stored in any database, or shared with any third party.
No personal data collected. This calculator does not collect, store, or process any personally identifiable information (PII). You do not need to create an account, provide an email address, or submit any form to receive results.
Standard analytics only. USFinanceCalculators.com uses standard anonymized web analytics (page views, device type, geographic region) to improve the tool. No individual calculation inputs or outputs are captured by analytics systems.
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Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)Federal regulator for consumer financial products. Oversees TILA compliance, payday and short-term lending rules, and provides consumer complaint resources for lending disputes.consumerfinance.gov — Consumer Tools
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Federal Trade Commission (FTC) — Pawn Shop GuideFTC consumer guidance on using pawn shops — covers borrower rights, what to expect in a pawn transaction, and how to compare pawn loans against other short-term credit options.consumer.ftc.gov — Using Pawn Shops
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Regulation Z — Truth in Lending Act (TILA)Federal law requiring lenders to disclose APR and total cost of credit. Applies to many pawn loans above statutory thresholds. Administered by the CFPB under 12 CFR Part 1026.cfpb.gov — Regulation Z Full Text
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Federal Reserve — Consumer Credit DataFederal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit statistical release — used to benchmark US short-term consumer lending rates and volume data referenced in this tool’s educational content.federalreserve.gov — G.19 Consumer Credit
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National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL)Tracks state-by-state pawn lending legislation, interest rate caps, and regulatory updates. Essential reference for operators building state-compliant rate cards.ncsl.org — State Payday & Short-Term Lending Laws
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National Foundation for Credit Counseling (NFCC)Non-profit network of certified credit counselors providing free or low-cost financial counseling — the recommended first step for borrowers considering high-cost short-term credit.nfcc.org — Find a Counselor
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National Pawnbrokers Association (NPA)Industry association representing US pawn shop operators. Publishes state-by-state regulatory summaries, consumer education resources, and annual industry data used in this tool’s benchmarks.nationalpawnbrokers.org — Industry Resources
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AnnualCreditReport.com (FTC-Authorized)The only FTC-authorized source for free credit reports from all three bureaus. Checking your credit report is the first step toward qualifying for lower-rate personal loans as an alternative to pawn financing.annualcreditreport.com — Free Credit Report
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No sponsored results Calculator outputs are determined solely by your inputs and the underlying math. No lender, broker, or advertiser pays to influence verdicts, default values, or recommended thresholds.
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No affiliate loan links This page contains no affiliate links to lenders. We do not earn commission or referral fees if you apply for or accept any loan product mentioned or linked from this tool.
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Advertising separation AdSense display ad slots on this page are clearly labeled “Advertisement.” Ad content is served by Google and does not influence the calculator’s educational content, formulas, or verdicts.
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Methodology published All formulas used in this calculator — including effective APR, redemption cost, partial paydown amortization, and alternate loan comparison — are fully documented in the “How This Tool Works” section above.
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Content review standard Educational content on this page is reviewed against CFPB, FTC, and NPA published guidance annually or following material regulatory changes. Last reviewed: May 2026.
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Rate data sourcing State pawn rate cap data referenced in examples and pro tips is sourced from the NPA State Law Summary (2025 edition) and NCSL state statutes database. Rates are current as of May 2026 but may change — verify with your state’s financial regulator.
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Open correction policy If you identify a calculation error, outdated rate, or factual inaccuracy, please contact us at usfinancecalculators.com/contact-us/. Confirmed errors are corrected within 48 hours.
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CFPB Consumer HelplineSubmit complaints about pawn shops, payday lenders, and other financial service providers. Available in 180+ languages.Submit a Complaint — consumerfinance.gov
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NFCC Free Credit CounselingNon-profit certified credit counselors — free or low-cost sessions, budgeting help, and debt management plans.Find a Counselor — nfcc.org
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NCUA — Find a Credit UnionLocate a federally insured credit union near you — credit unions typically offer the lowest personal loan rates and are the best alternate to a pawn loan for qualifying borrowers.Credit Union Locator — mycreditunion.gov
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Originally Published March 24, 2026 — initial tool and all sections.
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Last Updated May 16, 2026 — formula methodology review, state rate cap data refresh, gov link verification.
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Rate Data Currency State pawn rate caps sourced from NPA State Law Summary, 2025 edition. Effective as of Q1 2026.
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Regulatory Reference Date CFPB Regulation Z (12 CFR Part 1026) — current as of May 2026. FTC Pawn Shop guidance — current as of May 2026.
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Next Scheduled Review Q3 2026 — to capture any mid-year state pawn law amendments and CFPB short-term lending guidance updates.