Draft — pending review. This guide has not completed its editorial review yet; verify details against current SBA rules before relying on it.
Declined by a bank — what to fix and try next
Written 2026-07-18 · Draft — pending review
A loan decline stings. It also tells you something useful, if you can get past the sting long enough to read it. Most declines fall into a short list of causes, most causes have next steps, and — this is the part people miss — the decline itself can open doors, because SBA programs exist precisely for sound businesses that conventional credit does not fit.
First: find out why, specifically
"We can't do this one" is not a reason. Ask the banker what specifically fell short. Most will tell you if you ask calmly, and the answer sorts your situation into one of a few buckets: cash flow looked thin, history too short, credit issues, collateral gap, down payment short, the loan was too small or the wrong shape for that bank, or the industry sits outside their appetite.
Write the reason down. Everything that follows depends on it.
The bank-fit bucket: nothing is wrong with you
A large share of declines are about the bank, not the business. Banks have preferred loan sizes, industries, and structures. A request that is too small to be profitable for them, a business too young for their policy, seasonal cash flow their products do not handle, a line of credit need where they wanted a term loan — none of these mean your business is unfundable. They mean you asked the wrong shop.
This is exactly the situation SBA's "credit elsewhere" concept anticipates: SBA-backed loans are for borrowers who cannot get comparable credit on reasonable conventional terms. A conventional decline is often the first page of an SBA file. Next steps to consider:
- SBA-focused lenders. Some banks and nonbank lenders build their whole business on 7(a) loans, including smaller ones. Ask directly: "Do you do SBA loans at my size, in my industry?"
- Microlenders and CDFIs. If $50,000 or less would solve part of the need, SBA microloans and community lenders are built for exactly that, often with coaching attached.
- CDCs. If the request involves owner-occupied real estate or major equipment, a Certified Development Company can look at a 504 structure.
The fixable buckets
Thin or unproven cash flow. If the numbers genuinely do not cover the proposed payment, the fixes are structural: request less, contribute more, ask about a longer term, or wait while the trend improves. If the cash flow exists but the tax returns hide it — owner add-backs, a one-time bad year — the fix is presentation: interim statements, a clean debt schedule, and a written explanation. Free SBDC advisors are very good at this translation work.
Credit issues. Order your reports, dispute actual errors, catch up anything past due, and write the explanation letter — what happened, when, why, and what changed. Time and consistent payments do the heavy lifting. Meanwhile, some lenders weigh business performance more heavily than a bruised personal score; that is a question worth asking rather than assuming.
Down payment short. For startups and acquisitions, SBA generally looks for at least 10% into the project. If you are close, the gap may be smaller than you think: in an acquisition, seller financing on full standby for the life of the loan can count for up to half of that requirement under current rules — a structure to discuss, not assume. Otherwise the honest paths are saving longer, shrinking the project, or bringing in a partner with capital.
Collateral gap. For SBA loans, insufficient collateral alone is not supposed to sink an otherwise sound deal — lenders document what is reasonably available. If a conventional bank declined purely on collateral, an SBA conversation is the obvious next move.
Too little history. Startups and young businesses fail conventional checklists constantly. The compensating evidence is a real business plan, believable projections, relevant experience, and a documented injection. Microloans are also friendlier to thin history, and the coaching that comes with them is genuinely valuable.
What not to do
Do not fire off five more applications the same week with the same package. If the package had a weakness, five lenders will find the same one. Fix or explain the weakness first, then approach the next lender deliberately.
Do not swing to the opposite extreme either — high-cost fast-cash products that solve this month by strangling the next six. If you are tempted, talk to a free advisor first; that conversation costs nothing and has saved a lot of businesses.
And do not treat the decline as a secret. Tell the next lender about it, along with what you fixed. "Bank X passed because of Y; here is what changed" is a strong opening, not a confession — and it speaks directly to the credit-elsewhere question an SBA lender must answer anyway.
The order of operations
Get the specific reason. Sort it into a bucket. Fix what is fixable, document what is explainable, and match the next conversation to the actual problem — an SBA-focused lender for bank-fit issues, a microlender for small requests, a CDC for property, an advisor when you are not sure. Verify every program detail against current SBA rules and each lender's own policy, because both change. A decline ends one conversation. It does not end the project.