Foundations · Lesson 2 of 9
Why states regulate (and the feds, sometimes)
The split between state and federal oversight, why one activity can trigger both, and what that means for paperwork.
About 3 minutes to read
Builds on
What you'll learn
- The general split between state-licensed and federally-licensed activities
- Where the two overlap and why the paperwork stacks
- What primary versus concurrent oversight typically looks like
State first, federal sometimes
The default in the United States is that the states regulate business activity inside their borders. Federal oversight layers on top in specific industries: banking, securities, certain types of consumer finance, money transmission with cross-border movement.
For most licensable activities, the state is the primary regulator and the place where the day-to-day paperwork lives.
Where they overlap
Two patterns show up over and over:
Dual oversight. A company is examined by a state agency for its state activities and by a federal regulator for the federal piece. The exams happen on different schedules, the document requests are different, and the same business has two separate compliance teams in mind.
Passporting. In some industries a federal registration or qualification gives a company a head start on the state filings, but typically does not replace them. The state still wants the application, the fee, and the renewal.
What this means in practice
Most operators new to a regulated industry are surprised by how much of the work is state-level, not federal. A multi-state operator typically has more individual state interactions in a year than federal ones.
How we'd handle it
Mapping activity-by-activity, state-by-state, to the right license type is the kind of thing that's easy to underestimate, especially as products evolve. Cornerstone Licensing runs that mapping for you and then handles the applications and renewals so the calendar stays current.
FAQ
Questions operators ask about this lesson
Does a federal license cover the states?
Almost never on its own. Federal qualifications usually narrow what the states ask for, not what they require entirely.