Most small-business loan articles assume you have prime personal credit. The reality is that many business owners — especially in the first three years of operation — have damaged personal credit due to startup expenses, irregular income, or business cash-flow stress that bled into personal finances. The financing options for these borrowers are real but require careful selection.
What "bad credit" means in business lending
Business lenders typically look at three credit metrics: personal FICO (the owner's credit score), business credit (Dun & Bradstreet or Experian Business), and cash flow (3–12 months of business bank statements).
"Bad credit" in business lending typically means personal FICO below 650. Below 600, the lender pool narrows substantially. Below 550, only the most lenient lenders will work with you, typically at very high rates.
Lenders that approve sub-650 personal credit
Bluevine — Lines of credit up to $250,000. Minimum personal FICO 625. APRs 7.80% – 28.49%. Same-day funding available. Strong fit for established businesses with $40,000+ in monthly revenue.
OnDeck — Term loans and lines of credit. Minimum personal FICO 625. APRs 29.90% – 99.90% — high but accessible. Funding within 1–3 days. For businesses with at least $100,000 in annual revenue and 1+ year in business.
Fundbox — Lines of credit up to $150,000. Minimum personal FICO 600. APRs 4.66% – 8.99% per draw period (effectively much higher when annualized). Useful for short-term working capital gaps.
Credibly — Working capital loans and merchant cash advances. Minimum personal FICO 550. Cost typically expressed as factor rates (1.15–1.50), translating to effective APRs of 30–80%.
Reliant Funding — Merchant cash advances and short-term loans. Minimum personal FICO 525. Very expensive but accessible.
SBA Microloans — Up to $50,000 through SBA-approved nonprofit intermediaries. Minimum personal FICO varies by lender, often 575+. Rates typically 8–13% APR. Slow process (30–90 days) but cheapest option for borrowers who can wait.
The honest math on bad-credit business loans
Loans for borrowers with bad credit are dramatically more expensive than for prime borrowers. A $50,000 working capital loan:
- Prime borrower: roughly 9% APR, $1,038/month over 60 months, $12,287 lifetime interest
- Sub-650 borrower at OnDeck: 35% APR, $1,759/month, $55,572 lifetime interest
- Sub-600 borrower at MCA: 65% effective APR, even higher cost
The question to ask before borrowing: will the use of funds generate enough margin to cover this cost and still be worth doing? If you're using a 35% APR loan to fund inventory that produces a 40% gross margin, the math is marginal. If you're using it to cover payroll during a temporary cash crunch, you're just delaying the problem.
Better alternatives for some scenarios
Invoice factoring. If your business sells to other businesses on net-30 or net-60 terms, factoring sells your unpaid invoices to a factoring company at a discount. Qualification depends on your customers' creditworthiness, not yours. Costs are 1–5% per 30-day period.
Equipment financing. If your need is specific equipment, the equipment serves as collateral. Lenders are willing to overlook personal credit issues. Rates typically 8–18%.
Crowdfunding. Reward-based platforms (Kickstarter, Indiegogo) or revenue-based platforms (Mainvest, Honeycomb) bypass traditional credit checks entirely.
Friends and family. Often the cheapest option but the most damaging if it goes wrong. Get the agreement in writing if you go this route.
If you found a factual error in this article, please write to team@iloans.ai and we will correct it.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get a business loan with a 550 credit score?
Yes, through merchant cash advance providers and short-term loan companies like Credibly and Reliant Funding. Rates are very high (effective APRs 60–100%). Use only for short-term, high-margin needs.
Does the SBA offer loans for bad credit?
SBA Microloans (up to $50,000) often accept lower credit scores (575+) than standard SBA 7(a) loans. Rates are reasonable (8–13%) but the process is slow.
Will a business loan affect my personal credit?
If you sign a personal guarantee (most small business loans require one), yes. The loan typically doesn't appear on personal credit unless you default.
Should I take a high-rate loan to keep my business open?
Run the math carefully. If the loan delays an inevitable closure, you're better off addressing the underlying problem (cost cuts, pivot, etc.) than borrowing to extend it.