Population in South Carolina stands near 5.37M, with median household income at $62,542. The 14% poverty rate — meaningfully above the 11.5% national baseline, which lifts month-to-month demand for short-term credit — is the figure that turns an unexpected bill into a borrowing decision.

Payday-loan demand in South Carolina concentrates in Charleston, Columbia, North Charleston and Mount Pleasant. Charleston carries the largest single share of monthly search volume; each metro has its own credit-union footprint and employer mix.

Under S.C. Code Sec. 34-39-130 (Deferred Presentment Services Act), South Carolina borrowers are protected by the $550 principal ceiling, a flat prohibition on rollovers, the federal Military Lending Act 36% Military APR cap for covered service members, a 1-day cooling-off period between loans, the 391% APR statutory rate cap and the 31-day term cap. The South Carolina State Board of Financial Institutions, Consumer Finance Division accepts resident complaints, most of which resolve within 30–60 days.

At $62,542, South Carolina’s median household income trails the national figure — which leaves thinner cushion for an unexpected bill. The South Carolina State Board of Financial Institutions, Consumer Finance Division publishes annual data on storefront and online lender activity, and Carolinas Credit Union League credit unions serve the ZIP clusters where demand is densest — Charleston chief among them.

Search demand in South Carolina fans out from Charleston through Columbia, North Charleston, Mount Pleasant and Rock Hill and into smaller markets like Greenville, Summerville and Sumter. A PAL within reach depends on which Carolinas Credit Union League member serves your ZIP — our city pages map that out.

Whether a South Carolina borrower ends up in a debt trap usually comes down to three things: the South Carolina State Board of Financial Institutions, Consumer Finance Division, which issues licences and investigates complaints; the on-the-ground safety net of credit unions, employer-EWA programs and nonprofits such as Carolinas Credit Union League, South Carolina Appleseed Legal Justice Center and United Way Association of South Carolina; and the statutory ceiling — S.C. Code Sec. 34-39-130 (Deferred Presentment Services Act) — on what any licensed lender may charge. Large South Carolina payrolls — BMW Manufacturing, Boeing, Michelin, Walmart and Bon Secours Health — increasingly route financial-wellness benefits through EWA platforms and credit-union partnerships.

South Carolina caps payday loans at $550 and uses a statewide database (Veritec) to enforce a one-loan-at-a-time rule.

South Carolina’s biggest payrolls — BMW Manufacturing, Boeing, Michelin and Walmart — increasingly route benefits through EWA providers like DailyPay and Payactiv. If your employer is on that list, that is the first door to knock on.

Tip: Get every number in writing first: a South Carolina lender must hand you a TILA disclosure showing the finance charge, APR and total of payments. If they won't, walk away.

Real-dollar cost in South Carolina

South Carolina caps the fee at 15% of the face amount and uses Veritec to enforce a one-loan-at-a-time rule. The table puts the 391% cap into dollars for the loan amounts South Carolina borrowers ask for most. Actual fees can run below these figures if you qualify for a preferred rate or bank where you borrow.

Loan amountTermTypical feeTotal costAPR
$10031 days$33.21$133.21391%
$30031 days$99.62$399.62391%
$50031 days$166.04$666.04391%

Note: these figures reflect the statutory cap. Some South Carolina lenders charge less; any lender charging more would be unenforceable. Get the fee schedule in writing before you sign.

Top South Carolina cities

The cities below are where South Carolina's short-term-credit demand concentrates. Employer mix and credit-union coverage shift metro to metro, so the picture is worth reading city by city.

South Carolina alternatives (almost always cheaper)

A payday loan is rarely the cheapest answer in South Carolina. Run the options below — most save 80–95% over a storefront advance.

Salvation Army of South Carolina emergency aid

For same-day emergency aid, South Carolina's Salvation Army corps centers cover rent, utilities and prescription costs. Eligibility starts with a short intake interview at a center near you, including in Charleston.

Nonprofit$0 cost

United Way Association of South Carolina

Across South Carolina, United Way Association of South Carolina pairs emergency grants with financial-coaching programs. The aid is need-based and, unlike a loan, carries no repayment obligation.

Nonprofit$0 cost

South Carolina State Board of Financial Institutions, Consumer Finance Division complaint portal

The South Carolina State Board of Financial Institutions, Consumer Finance Division takes South Carolina consumer complaints at no cost. It can order restitution, suspend a licence or refer a case for enforcement; the typical resolution window is 30–60 days.

State regulator$0 cost

Free tax prep + EITC advance for South Carolina filers

South Carolina residents earning under about $60,000 qualify for free tax prep through VITA and IRS Free File. Many recover refunds or EITC of $1,000–$6,400, usually within 21 days of e-filing.

Free serviceUp to $6,400

Earned Wage Access (EWA) — popular with South Carolina employers

Earned Wage Access turns pay you have already worked for into cash today. BMW Manufacturing and Boeing are among the South Carolina employers that integrate a provider; the cost is an optional tip, not interest.

Employer-linked$0 APR

South Carolina-specific FAQ

What if I can't repay my South Carolina payday loan on the due date?

Don't let it default silently. South Carolina forbids rollovers, but the better move is to request an Extended Payment Plan from the lender — usually available once a year at no extra cost.

Can I have more than one payday loan at a time in South Carolina?

In practice, most South Carolina borrowers are held to one or two outstanding loans. South Carolina caps payday loans at $550 and uses a statewide database (Veritec) to enforce a one-loan-at-a-time rule. The state database catches stacking even when an individual lender doesn't.

Where do I file a complaint about a South Carolina payday lender?

File with the South Carolina State Board of Financial Institutions, Consumer Finance Division — it covers licensing violations, harassment and collection abuse for South Carolina borrowers. South Carolina Appleseed Legal Justice Center and Carolinas Credit Union League also track complaints; the CFPB takes federal-level filings.

How much can I borrow in South Carolina?

S.C. Code Sec. 34-39-130 (Deferred Presentment Services Act) caps the principal at $550, and the term at 31 days. Most loans in South Carolina land between $100 and $550; South Carolina caps payday loans at $550 and uses a statewide database (Veritec) to enforce a one-loan-at-a-time rule.

Are there military protections for South Carolina service members?

The Military Lending Act's 36% Military APR cap covers active-duty South Carolina service members and their dependents, which excludes most payday products here. Service-relief societies and USAA emergency loans are additional options.

South Carolina state disclosure: Loans to South Carolina residents are governed by S.C. Code Sec. 34-39-130 (Deferred Presentment Services Act) and supervised by the South Carolina State Board of Financial Institutions, Consumer Finance Division. Licensed lenders must give TILA-compliant disclosure of the finance charge, APR and payment schedule, and grant an Extended Payment Plan once a year on request. Complaints: consumerfinance.sc.gov ↗. See also 15 alternatives ranked by APR and the main payday-loans guide.