Business loan delinquency reached 1.34% in Q4 2025, but the defining trend is divergence: C&I loan stress is easing while commercial real estate delinquency continues to rise.
Key Takeaways
- The gap between C&I and CRE delinquency trends marks the first sustained divergence in this cycle, with CRE continuing to deteriorate while C&I improves.
- C&I delinquency fell from 2.77% to 2.62% across 2025, while CRE rose from 1.57% to 1.58%, confirming the structural split in credit stress by loan type.
- CRE charge-offs peaked at 0.26% in Q2 2024 and have since declined to 0.13% in Q4 2025, suggesting banks are absorbing CRE losses through reserves rather than accelerating write-downs.
- Business loan charge-offs stabilized near 0.55% in Q4 2025, below the COVID-era peak of 0.59% but nearly five times the post-pandemic trough of 0.12% in Q4 2021.
- Overall loan delinquency across all categories fell for the third consecutive quarter to 1.48% in Q4 2025, even as business-specific categories continued rising, indicating consumer and residential portfolios are offsetting commercial stress.
- Current business loan delinquency at 1.34% remains far below crisis-era peaks of 4.39% (2009 GFC) and 3.69% (2002 dot-com), placing the current cycle in an elevated-but-manageable range.
- C&I delinquency at 2.62% has declined for three consecutive quarters from a cycle high of 2.77% in Q1 2025, coinciding with the Prime Rate easing from 7.50% to 7.02% over the same period.
- Current delinquency levels are elevated but remain far below crisis-era peaks, indicating localized stress rather than systemic risk.
Current Delinquency and Charge-Off Rates by Loan Category, Q4 2025
Credit stress is concentrated in C&I loans (2.62%), while CRE deterioration is more gradual but persistent. C&I carries nearly double the all-business-loans rate, reflecting debt service pressure in operating credit facilities.
| Loan Category | Delinquency Rate | Charge-Off Rate | Prior Quarter (Q3 2025) | Year-Ago (Q4 2024) | Quarterly Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All Business Loans | 1.34% | 0.55% | 1.33% | 1.27% | Rising |
| C&I Loans | 2.62% | N/A | 2.71% | 2.76% | Falling |
| CRE Loans (excl. Farmland) | 1.58% | 0.13% | 1.56% | 1.56% | Rising |
| All Loans and Leases | 1.48% | 0.58% | 1.49% | 1.53% | Falling |
What the Data Shows
C&I Delinquency Easing from Cycle High
C&I delinquency declined from 2.77% to 2.62% across 2025, reversing from cycle highs as rate pressure eased.
CRE Stress Plateauing at Elevated Levels
CRE delinquency reached 1.58%, more than double pre-pandemic levels (0.67%), with only minimal recent slowing.
Charge-Offs Stabilized Below COVID Peaks
Charge-offs remain elevated at 0.55% but stable, suggesting banks are managing credit risk through reserves rather than accelerating write-downs.
Delinquency Rate Trends: Business vs. C&I vs. CRE Loans, 2019-2025
The divergence between C&I and CRE is the defining pattern of the current credit cycle. C&I peaked earlier and is now declining, while CRE continues to climb despite the same rate environment.
Delinquency vs Charge-Off Rates by Loan Category, Q4 2025
The gap between delinquency and charge-off rates reveals how banks are managing credit stress. CRE loans show the widest spread: 1.58% delinquency but only 0.13% charge-offs, indicating banks are holding distressed CRE loans on book rather than writing them down.
Delinquency Rates Across Credit Cycles: Pre-COVID to Present
CRE delinquency is the only major category exceeding both its pre-pandemic and COVID-era peaks.
| Metric | Pre-COVID Reference | COVID Peak | Post-COVID Low | Current (Q4 2025) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Business Loan Delinquency | 1.09% (Q4 2019) | 1.30% (Q3 2020) | 0.97% (Q1 2023) | 1.34% |
| Business Loan Charge-Off | 0.30% (Q1 2019) | 0.59% (Q2 2020) | 0.12% (Q4 2021) | 0.55% |
| C&I Loan Delinquency | 2.31% (Q4 2019) | 2.48% (Q1 2020) | 1.52% (Q3 2021) | 2.62% |
| CRE Loan Delinquency | 0.67% (Q4 2019) | 1.15% (Q4 2020) | 0.63% (Q3 2022) | 1.58% |
Credit Cycle Scorecard: Current Conditions Summary
Three of five indicators signal caution, with CRE delinquency driving the current risk profile.
| Indicator | Current Value | Direction | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Business Loan Delinquency | 1.34% | Rising (Q4 2025 vs Q3 2025: +1 bp) | Yellow |
| Business Loan Charge-Offs | 0.55% | Flat (Q4 2025 vs Q3 2025: -2 bp) | Yellow |
| C&I Loan Delinquency Trend | 2.62% | Falling (3 consecutive quarterly declines) | Green |
| CRE Loan Delinquency Trend | 1.58% | Rising (new cycle high) | Red |
| Prime Rate (Q4 2025 avg) | 7.02% | Falling (from 7.50% in Q1 2025) | Green |
Structural Interpretation
The C&I/CRE Divergence Is the Defining Story
C&I delinquency is declining while CRE continues rising, marking a structural split in credit conditions that translates directly into tighter CRE underwriting and wider spreads.
Rate Relief Is Working for C&I, Not Yet for CRE
Falling rates are relieving C&I borrowers, but CRE stress is driven by property fundamentals rather than borrowing costs. Rate cuts alone cannot resolve office vacancies and revaluation pressure.
This Is Not a Systemic Crisis
Current delinquency levels remain far below historical peaks (1.34% vs. 4.39% GFC peak), indicating localized stress rather than broad financial instability.