Pawnbrokers in California operate under Financial Code Section 21000 et seq., requiring state licensing through the Department of Justice plus local law enforcement registration; Santa Clara County Sheriff handles reporting for unincorporated areas.
California Financial Code Section 21000 et seq. governs pawnbrokers, requiring DOJ-issued state licensure plus registration with the local police chief or sheriff. Santa Clara County Sheriff administers local reporting for unincorporated jurisdictions. Pawnbrokers must report every loan and pledge to the state's CAPSS-equivalent reporting system (LEADS Online), photograph collateral, hold pledged items at least four months before sale, verify pledgor identification, and limit interest and fees to statutory caps. Live Scan, surety bonds, and zoning approval are required. Cities including San Jose impose additional zoning buffers. Violations carry misdemeanor charges, license revocation, and civil penalties up to $1,000 per loan.
Operating without state license, failing to report pledges, selling collateral before the four-month hold, charging excess interest, accepting pledges without ID, or buying from minors triggers misdemeanors, civil fines, and license revocation.
Santa Clara County, CA
California Business and Professions Code Section 21626 requires secondhand dealers to register with local law enforcement, hold tangible items 30 days, and r...
Santa Clara County, CA
Santa Clara County Code Enforcement handles violations in unincorporated areas through the Department of Planning and Development. Reports can be filed onlin...
See how Santa Clara County's pawnbrokers rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.