On April 16, the Colorado General Assembly enacted House Bill 25-1201, replacing the state’s prior money transmitter law with the Money Transmission Modernization Act (the “Act”). Modeled on the multistate framework developed by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors (CSBS), the Act aims to align Colorado’s licensing and oversight regime with standards adopted in other states, while updating key regulatory definitions, exemptions, prudential requirements, and enforcement tools. 

The Act introduced several notable changes for covered entities, including: 

Putting It Into Practice: Colorado’s adoption of a uniform money transmission framework is part of a growing trend among states to expand and modernize financial licensing requirements (previously discussed here and here). Companies operating in Colorado should assess whether their activities fall within the expanded scope of the new law and ensure compliance with updated licensing, control, reporting, and bonding requirements. 

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