Commercial lending just broke out of its longest post-COVID plateau. After 8 quarters of near-flat C&I balances (Q2 2023 through Q4 2024), banks added $83.35 billion in new Commercial and Industrial loans in January-February 2026 alone, pushing the category to $2,789.96 billion. CRE lending continues its slow, steady expansion at 2.4% year-over-year, with delinquency rates plateauing near 1.57% through all of 2025. Total bank credit reached an all-time high of $19,345.37 billion.
Key Takeaways
- C&I lending is reaccelerating sharply: $83.35 billion added in January-February 2026 alone, reversing 18 months of near-flat growth (Q2 2023 through Q4 2024).
- CRE growth remains steady but slow at 2.4% year-over-year ($71.00 billion), despite CRE delinquency rates plateauing at 1.58% rather than continuing to rise.
- Total bank credit crossed $19.3 trillion for the first time (week ending March 18, 2026), with total loans and leases growing 2.1% in roughly 11 weeks.
- The C&I quarterly trend shows a complete cycle since 2021: PPP-inflated balances, post-PPP normalization, an 8-quarter plateau (Q2 2023 through Q4 2024), and the current reacceleration phase.
- C&I and CRE combined represent 43.1% of total loans and leases on commercial bank balance sheets, with CRE the larger of the two categories at $3,073.34 billion.
- February 2026's single-month C&I jump of $50.43 billion was the largest single-month C&I increase in the 12-month series, exceeding the next-largest gain (January's $32.92 billion) by $17.51 billion.
As of February 2026, U.S. commercial banks hold $2,789.96 billion in Commercial and Industrial loans and $3,073.34 billion in Commercial Real Estate loans, combining to $5,863.30 billion, or 43.1% of total loans and leases in the banking system.
C&I and CRE Loan Volume by Month (Mar 2025 - Feb 2026)
C&I lending ran nearly flat for nine months before accelerating sharply in January-February 2026, while CRE growth remained steady throughout the period.
| Month | C&I Loans ($B) | MoM Change | CRE Loans ($B) | MoM Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 2025 | $2,675.29 | - | $3,002.34 | - |
| Apr 2025 | $2,668.98 | -$6.31 | $3,005.41 | +$3.07 |
| May 2025 | $2,679.55 | +$10.57 | $3,011.40 | +$5.99 |
| Jun 2025 | $2,685.30 | +$5.75 | $3,016.66 | +$5.26 |
| Jul 2025 | $2,674.32 | -$10.98 | $3,021.39 | +$4.73 |
| Aug 2025 | $2,685.16 | +$10.84 | $3,025.41 | +$4.02 |
| Sep 2025 | $2,693.71 | +$8.55 | $3,028.65 | +$3.24 |
| Oct 2025 | $2,692.19 | -$1.52 | $3,039.28 | +$10.63 |
| Nov 2025 | $2,697.67 | +$5.48 | $3,051.48 | +$12.20 |
| Dec 2025 | $2,706.61 | +$8.94 | $3,066.75 | +$15.27 |
| Jan 2026 | $2,739.53 | +$32.92 | $3,067.66 | +$0.91 |
| Feb 2026 | $2,789.96 | +$50.43 | $3,073.34 | +$5.68 |
What the Data Shows
C&I reacceleration after 18 months of stagnation
From Q2 2023 through Q4 2024, C&I balances moved in a narrow $47 billion band ($2,757-$2,805 billion). That plateau broke decisively in early 2026: January added $32.92 billion and February added $50.43 billion, signaling renewed demand for commercial term loans and revolving credit facilities.
CRE: steady expansion despite elevated delinquencies
CRE balances grew every month in the series, adding $71.00 billion over the 12-month window (2.4% year-over-year). Banks are not retreating from commercial real estate lending despite delinquency rates holding at 1.57-1.58% through 2025.
C&I volatility vs. CRE consistency
C&I month-over-month changes ranged from -$10.98 billion (Jul 2025) to +$50.43 billion (Feb 2026). CRE showed no negative months at all, with changes ranging from +$0.91 billion to +$15.27 billion. The two categories exhibit fundamentally different growth profiles on bank balance sheets.
Bank Credit Composition (Week Ending March 18, 2026)
C&I and CRE together account for nearly half of all loans and leases, and roughly 30% of total bank credit including securities holdings.
| Category | Balance ($B) | Share of Total L&L | Share of Total Bank Credit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Bank Credit | $19,345.37 | - | 100.0% |
| Total Loans & Leases | $13,595.14 | 100.0% | 70.3% |
| Commercial & Industrial (C&I) | $2,789.96 | 20.5% | 14.4% |
| Commercial Real Estate (CRE) | $3,073.34 | 22.6% | 15.9% |
| C&I + CRE Combined | $5,863.30 | 43.1% | 30.3% |
CRE Delinquency Rate by Quarter (Q1 2024 - Q4 2025)
CRE delinquencies rose sharply through 2024, then plateaued at approximately 1.57% for all four quarters of 2025, suggesting the credit cycle has stabilized rather than deteriorated further.
| Quarter | CRE Delinquency Rate | QoQ Change (bps) |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 2024 | 1.21% | - |
| Q2 2024 | 1.42% | +21 |
| Q3 2024 | 1.51% | +9 |
| Q4 2024 | 1.56% | +5 |
| Q1 2025 | 1.57% | +1 |
| Q2 2025 | 1.57% | 0 |
| Q3 2025 | 1.56% | -1 |
| Q4 2025 | 1.58% | +2 |
The quarterly C&I loan trend reveals three distinct phases since mid-2021: the PPP normalization drawdown, an 8-quarter plateau, and the current reacceleration that began in Q1 2025.
Interpretation
Structural shift: C&I lending exits its longest post-GFC plateau
The 8-quarter C&I plateau from Q2 2023 through Q4 2024 was the longest period of near-zero C&I growth since the post-financial-crisis deleveraging of 2009-2010. The January-February 2026 breakout ($83.35 billion in two months) suggests a regime change, not a seasonal blip, likely reflecting pent-up capital expenditure demand flowing into revolving credit lines and term facilities.
Market driver: rate stability unlocked borrowing
The C&I reacceleration coincides with the Fed holding the federal funds rate steady since mid-2024, giving businesses rate certainty to commit to new credit. The credit box appears to be widening alongside volume growth, consistent with banks competing for higher-quality C&I business.
Borrower implication: CRE resilience despite the delinquency narrative
CRE delinquencies at 1.58% are elevated relative to the sub-1% rates of 2021-2023, but the plateau through all of 2025 signals stabilization, not escalation. Banks added $71 billion in new CRE exposure over the same period, indicating that lender appetite for well-structured real estate debt remains intact despite headline concerns about commercial property markets.
What This Means for Borrowers
- C&I credit is loosening. The breakout in revolving credit and term loan volume signals that banks are competing for commercial borrowers. Firms with solid financials have more leverage to negotiate spreads and terms than at any point since early 2023.
- CRE is not shutting down. Despite elevated delinquencies, banks added $71 billion in new CRE exposure over the past 12 months. Well-structured deals with strong debt service coverage and reasonable loan-to-value ratios are still getting funded.
- Rate stability is the catalyst. The Fed holding steady since mid-2024 gives borrowers and lenders shared certainty on pricing. Businesses that delayed capital expenditure borrowing during the rate-hike cycle are now acting.