Business Loan Approval Rates by Lender Type (2025 SBCS)

Coverage: 2024-2025 SBCS (survey years 2024 and 2025), Q1 2026 SLOOS Updates: Annual Next update:

Business loan approval and funding outcomes by lender type and product category. Compares 2024 and 2025 SBCS survey years across 7 lender types and 8 product categories.

Small banks fully fund 57% of business loan applications versus 43% at large banks, a persistent 14-point gap despite large banks receiving the most applications (41% of all applicants).

Higher approval rates do not necessarily translate to better financing outcomes, as cost, satisfaction, and full funding probability vary significantly across lender types.

Key Takeaways

  • Full funding rates range from 27% (CDFIs) to 57% (small banks), a 30-point spread across lender types.
  • Online lenders improved the most year-over-year (+8pp, from 30% to 38%), while CDFIs saw the largest decline (-15pp, from 42% to 27%).
  • Large banks are the most-applied-to lender type (41% of applicants) despite ranking fifth in full funding rate (43%).
  • Online lenders fully fund only 38% of applications, yet 60% of their borrowers report costs higher than expected.
  • Auto and equipment loans carry the highest full funding rate of any product type at 71%, while SBA loans carry the lowest at 32%.
  • Credit unions lead borrower satisfaction at 76%, compared to 35% for online lenders.
  • Speed is the dominant factor driving online lender applications (64%), while only 28% of online lender applicants cite prior denial elsewhere.
  • Bank lending standards for small-firm C&I loans have returned to near-neutral, with the SLOOS net tightening index at 8.9% in Q1 2026, down from a peak of 49.2% in Q3 2023.

Business Loan Approval Rates by Lender Type

Approval outcomes vary more by lender type than by overall credit conditions.

Lender TypeFull Funding Rate (2025)Prior Year (2024)ChangeAny Funding RateDenial RateSatisfaction
Small bank57% 54% +3pp80%20%65%
Finance company50% 47% +3pp81%19%57%
Credit union44% 47% -3pp71%29%76%
Large bank43% 45% -2pp69%31%64%
Online lender38% 30% +8pp77%23%35%
CDFI27% 42% -15pp66%34%62%
Overall (all sources)52% 52% 081%19%--
Source: Federal Reserve Banks, 2026 Small Business Credit Survey (SBCS): Report on Employer Firms. Survey year 2025, n=2,270 loan/LOC/MCA applicants. Prior year from 2025 SBCS (survey year 2024). "Any Funding Rate" = 100% minus Denial Rate. "Full Funding Rate" = received all amount sought.

What the Data Shows

Small Banks Outperform on Full Funding

Small banks fully fund 57% of applications versus 43% at large banks, suggesting relationship proximity drives outcomes more than institutional scale.

Online Lenders: High Access, Low Satisfaction

Online lenders provide funding to 77% of applicants, but only 35% report satisfaction, with most citing higher-than-expected costs.

Credit Unions Lead in Borrower Satisfaction

Credit unions combine moderate approval rates with the highest satisfaction (76%), indicating stronger borrower alignment after approval.

Full Funding Rate by Lender Type: 2024 vs 2025 Survey

Approval dispersion is widening across lender types. Online lenders showed the largest improvement (+8pp), while CDFIs experienced the sharpest decline (-15pp).

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% Small bank 54% 57% (+3pp) Finance company 47% 50% (+3pp) Credit union 47% 44% (-3pp) Large bank 45% 43% (-2pp) Online lender 30% 38% (+8pp) CDFI 42% 27% (-15pp) 2024 Survey 2025 Survey
Source: Federal Reserve Banks, 2025 and 2026 Small Business Credit Survey: Report on Employer Firms. Full funding rate = percentage of applicants receiving all amount sought.

Business Loan Approval Rates by Product Type

Approval rates vary by nearly 40 percentage points across product types, from 71% for equipment loans to 32% for SBA loans.

Product TypeFull Funding RateDenial RateSample Size
Auto/equipment loan71% 11% 294
Mortgage/real estate loan55% 22% 137
Merchant cash advance48% 12% 298
Line of credit45% 24% 977
Personal loan40% 30% 157
Home equity LOC35% 30% 110
Business loan37% 28% 683
SBA loan/LOC32% 40% 359
Source: Federal Reserve Banks, 2026 Small Business Credit Survey (SBCS): Report on Employer Firms. Survey year 2025. "Full Funding Rate" = received all amount sought. Products sorted by full funding rate descending.

Why Borrowers Choose Each Lender Type

Borrower behavior reflects a tradeoff between speed, cost, and approval probability.

Selection FactorOnline Lenders (n=693)Finance Companies (n=313)
Speed of decision/funding64% 44%
Chance of being funded49% 34%
No collateral required38% --
Cost/interest rate--33%
Existing relationship31% 32%
Denied elsewhere28% --
Source: Federal Reserve Banks, 2026 Small Business Credit Survey (SBCS): Report on Employer Firms. Survey year 2025. Respondents could select multiple factors. "--" = factor not reported for that lender type.

Interpretation and Market Implications

Relationship Lending Still Drives Outcomes

Small banks and credit unions consistently outperform on full funding and borrower satisfaction, reinforcing the value of relationship-based underwriting.

Credit Conditions Stabilizing

Lending standards have normalized, with SLOOS tightening falling from 49.2% to 8.9%, indicating a more balanced credit environment.

Speed Comes with a Cost Premium

Online lenders provide faster access but deliver lower satisfaction and higher reported costs. Cross-reference with SBA lending statistics for government-backed program volumes.

How does your business profile match up against these lender approval benchmarks?

Compare Approval Rates for Your Profile

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a full funding rate?

The percentage of applicants who received the full amount of financing they requested. A 57% full funding rate means 57 out of 100 applicants got everything they asked for.

Why do small banks have higher approval rates than large banks?

Relationship-based underwriting and local decision-making typically lead to higher full funding outcomes. Small banks often have more direct knowledge of borrower circumstances and local market conditions.

Why are online lenders less satisfying despite providing more access?

Online lenders approve a high percentage of applicants (77% receive some funding) but borrowers frequently report higher-than-expected costs. Among online lender borrowers, 60% say costs exceeded expectations. Speed of access comes with a cost premium.

Data Sources & Methodology
  1. Federal Reserve Banks - 2026 Small Business Credit Survey (SBCS): Report on Employer Firms - Survey year 2025, sample of 6,525 employer firms. Approval outcomes, satisfaction, and application data across lender types and product categories.
  2. Federal Reserve Board - Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices (SLOOS) - Quarterly survey of bank lending standards. Net percentage tightening for C&I loans to small and large/mid-market firms, Q2 2020 through Q1 2026.
Approval outcome data is drawn from the Federal Reserve Banks' 2026 Small Business Credit Survey (SBCS), which surveyed 6,525 employer firms in 2025. "Full Funding Rate" represents the percentage of applicants who received all of the financing amount sought. "Any Funding Rate" is calculated as 100% minus the denial rate (percentage receiving no funding). Satisfaction rates reflect the percentage of borrowers reporting satisfaction with their lender experience. Application share and selection factors reflect self-reported responses; respondents could apply to multiple lender types and cite multiple selection factors, so percentages do not sum to 100%. Bank lending standards data is from the Federal Reserve Board's Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey (SLOOS), reported as net percentage of banks tightening standards for Commercial and Industrial loans. Positive values indicate net tightening; negative values indicate net easing. All figures are based on official reported data and are not modeled or estimated unless otherwise noted.

This article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed for accuracy.

Last reviewed: