Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART II— - PERSONNEL › Chapter CHAPTER 49— - MISCELLANEOUS PROHIBITIONS AND PENALTIES › § 987
Limits how much interest and fees a lender can charge a service member or their dependent. A lender may only charge interest if the loan agreement says so, if the law allows it, and if it is not banned here. The annual percentage rate (APR) cannot be higher than 36 percent. Before issuing credit, the lender must tell the borrower, in person and in writing, the APR, the Truth in Lending disclosures, and a clear description of the payment duties, following Federal Reserve rules. Federal rules override state rules that conflict, but any state law that gives the service member more protection still applies. States may not let lenders charge covered members more than the state’s legal limit or strip away state protections because someone is military or lives elsewhere. Lenders may not roll over or refinance a borrower’s loan with new credit from the same lender, force the borrower to give up legal rights, require arbitration or unfair notice rules, demand unreasonable notice to sue, use a borrower’s bank account or vehicle title as security, require an allotment to repay, or forbid prepayment or charge a prepayment penalty. Knowingly breaking these rules can bring criminal fines or up to one year in jail, or both. A harmed person can sue for actual damages (not less than $500 per violation), punitive and other relief, and attorney fees and costs. Illegal loan contracts are void from the start, and arbitration agreements about these loans cannot be enforced. The Secretary of Defense must write rules on required disclosures, how to calculate APR, fee limits and how to show them, and definitions. Short definitions: covered member = active duty over 30 days or on active Guard/Reserve duty; dependent = persons listed in the referenced law; interest = all fees and charges related to the loan; annual percentage rate = same as Truth in Lending and includes fees; creditor = a person in the business of making consumer loans (or an assignee); consumer credit = defined by Defense rules and excludes home mortgages and purchase loans secured by the bought item. A lawsuit must be filed no later than 2 years after discovering the violation or 5 years after it happened.
Full Legal Text
Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 987
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73