Quik Cash is owned by QC Holdings, which also operates more than 500 loan stores under the names National Quik Cash, California Budget Finance, Express Check Advance of Southern California, First Payday Loans, Nationwide Budget Finance, and QC Financial Services.
QC Holdings targets working class people with short-term, high-interest loans from $100 to $500.
QC Holdings is a publicly traded company, trading on the NASDAQ under the symbol QCCO.
The company also offers check-cashing services, title loans, installment loans, credit services, open-end credit, debit cards, money transfers, and Western Union money orders.
QC Holdings was founded by Don Early in 1984 in Overland Park, Kansas. The company has 1,600 employees and had $182.58 million in revenue in 2013.
Quik Cash and QC Holdings was sued by the Attorney General of the state of Arizona. The company filed hundreds of suits against consumers who had defaulted on their loans in Pima County, Arizona, without regard to where the defendant lived, even if it was in a different state. This severely limited the defendants’ ability to defend themselves. The company was ordered to pay $170,000 to settle the lawsuit in 2011.
Quik Cash
Quik Cash is owned by QC Holdings, which also operates more than 500 loan stores under the names National Quik Cash, California Budget Finance, Express Check Advance of Southern California, First Payday Loans, Nationwide Budget Finance, and QC Financial Services.
QC Holdings targets working class people with short-term, high-interest loans from $100 to $500.
QC Holdings is a publicly traded company, trading on the NASDAQ under the symbol QCCO.
History
The company also offers check-cashing services, title loans, installment loans, credit services, open-end credit, debit cards, money transfers, and Western Union money orders.
QC Holdings was founded by Don Early in 1984 in Overland Park, Kansas. The company has 1,600 employees and had $182.58 million in revenue in 2013.
Quik Cash and QC Holdings was sued by the Attorney General of the state of Arizona. The company filed hundreds of suits against consumers who had defaulted on their loans in Pima County, Arizona, without regard to where the defendant lived, even if it was in a different state. This severely limited the defendants’ ability to defend themselves. The company was ordered to pay $170,000 to settle the lawsuit in 2011.