- As of mid-2026 South Dakota has no commercial financing disclosure law or MCA-specific statute and no usury cap, so providers aren't required to give a standardized APR or total-cost figure, though its Deceptive Trade Practices and Consumer Protection law still applies.
- The economy combines agriculture and livestock, food processing, and a major Sioux Falls financial-services hub, alongside Black Hills tourism and large healthcare systems.
- A single SBA district office in Sioux Falls serves the entire state through participating 7(a) and 504 lenders.
Funding the South Dakota economy
South Dakota runs on two engines that rarely make national headlines but quietly drive the state. The first is agriculture: corn, soybeans, and cattle fill the eastern prairie, feeding large processors like Smithfield in Sioux Falls. The second is finance — Sioux Falls became a credit-card and banking hub after the state removed its interest-rate cap in the early 1980s, and the financial sector still employs thousands. Add the Black Hills tourism draw around Rapid City and Mount Rushmore, plus major healthcare systems Sanford and Avera, and you have a small-population state with a surprisingly diverse demand for capital.
Industries we fund across South Dakota
- Agriculture & ag suppliers — equipment financing and seasonal working capital for operations and the businesses that serve them across the eastern farm belt and around Aberdeen.
- Food processing & manufacturing — equipment loans and lines of credit for producers and packagers in the Sioux Falls area.
- Tourism & hospitality — short-term working capital for hotels, restaurants, and outfitters in Rapid City and the Black Hills.
- Healthcare — practice financing and build-outs in Sioux Falls and Rapid City.
- Construction & trades — equipment financing for contractors keeping up with growth along the I-29 and I-90 corridors.
What the rules mean for you
South Dakota is one of the most lender-friendly states in the country: it has no usury cap and no commercial financing disclosure law, so MCA and sales-based financing providers aren’t required by the state to give you a standardized APR or total-cost figure, and they generally don’t register with a state regulator. That freedom cuts both ways. The practical takeaway: get the numbers yourself. Before signing, ask for the factor rate, the total repayment amount, the holdback percentage, and every fee in writing, and read the reconciliation clause closely. Hoss Capital only works with partners who operate transparently.