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Loan Rates and Fees in Wyoming

Page last reviewed: March 27, 2026 · Reviewed for accuracy by LendUp

Payday Loan Costs in Wyoming

Payday Loans

Wyoming does not set a maximum loan amount for payday loans (called "post-dated check" transactions under state law). A licensed lender can charge up to $30 per $100 borrowed - labeled "finance charge" on your agreement - with terms up to one calendar month. No statewide loan database is required.

On a $300 loan due in 14 days, the maximum fee is $90, making your total repayment $390. Your agreement will show roughly 782% APR - that figure reflects the 14-day fee scaled to a full year, as required by federal disclosure rules.

You borrow
$300
14-day term
Max fee
$90
$30 per $100 borrowed
You repay
$390
total due
APR disclosed
~782%
annualized - required disclosure
  • Rollovers: Wyoming law prohibits rolling over a payday loan into a new one - if a lender offers a rollover, verify with the Wyoming Division of Banking.
  • Returned payment fee - labeled "NSF fee" or "returned check fee" on your agreement - has no specific cap confirmed in current Wyoming statute; ask the lender for the exact amount before you sign.
  • Database or verification fee: Wyoming does not require a statewide loan database; if you see this line item, ask the lender for the exact amount before you sign.

If an offer exceeds these limits, verify with the Wyoming Division of Banking.

Installment Loan Costs in Wyoming

Installment Loans

Wyoming licenses installment lenders under the Wyoming Uniform Consumer Credit Code (W.S. Title 40, Chapter 14), which caps interest using a tiered structure based on the unpaid balance. Interest accrues on the declining balance - you pay interest only on what you still owe.

Unpaid Balance Portion Maximum Annual Rate
First $1,000 36%
$1,001 – $25,000 21%

Any origination or prepaid finance charges count toward the rate cap above and cannot be layered on top of the maximum interest rate; confirm the full fee structure with the lender or the Wyoming Division of Banking.

On a $1,000 loan at 36% annual interest for 12 months, you'd repay approximately $1,197 total - roughly $197 in interest plus $1,000 in principal, assuming equal monthly payments on a declining balance.

Loan amount
$1,000
12 monthly payments
Total interest
~$197
36% annual interest
Total repayment
~$1,197
principal + interest
  • Refinancing restarts interest on the new amount - compare your remaining balance to the new loan's total of payments before you agree.
  • Returned payment fee: same rule as payday - no specific cap confirmed in current Wyoming statute; ask the lender for the exact amount before you sign.
  • Late fee - labeled "delinquency charge" on some agreements - has no specific dollar cap confirmed in current public statute text; ask the lender for the exact amount and grace period before you sign.
  • Prepayment: you can pay off early with no penalty, and interest stops accruing on the date you pay - see installment loans in Wyoming for repayment details.

If an offer exceeds these limits, verify with the Wyoming Division of Banking.

What to Check on Your Offer

Payday
  • Finance charge: can't exceed $30 per $100 borrowed (max $90 on a $300 loan).
  • APR: on a 14-day $300 loan at maximum fee, roughly 782% - the short term inflates this number.
  • Loan amount: Wyoming sets no statutory maximum - confirm the lender's limit directly.
Installment
  • Interest rate: should not exceed 36% per year on the first $1,000 of unpaid balance, dropping to 21% above that.
  • Late fee: no confirmed state cap - ask the lender for the exact amount and grace period before you sign.
  • Prepayment penalty: Wyoming does not permit prepayment penalties - this line should not appear on your agreement.
  • Returned payment fee: no confirmed state cap - ask the lender for the exact amount before you sign.
  • Total of payments: add up every scheduled payment on the agreement and confirm it matches the "total of payments" disclosure.
  • Military/MLA: if you're an active-duty service member or dependent, federal law caps your rate at 36% APR.

Official Sources