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New Recovery Act Funding Extension for SBA Loans – What it Means for Your Small Business

On March 2, President Obama signed legislation extending the availability of Recovery Act funds for certain Small Business Administration (SBA)-guaranteed loan programs. This is the second time the U.S. Senate has approved additional funding for economic stimulus provisions related to SBA-guaranteed loans and is good news for small businesses seeking start-up and growth financing.

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On March 2, President Obama signed legislation extending the availability of Recovery Act funds for certain Small Business Administration (SBA)-guaranteed loan programs.

This is the second time the U.S. Senate has approved additional funding for economic stimulus provisions related to SBA-guaranteed loans and is good news for small businesses seeking start-up and growth financing. 

What the Funding Means

You can read more in this press release, but essentially the SBA estimates that the additional funding will support about $1.8 billion in lending by extending its ability to guarantee loans enhanced by Recovery Act provisions. These include higher guarantees on SBA 7(a) loans (90 percent compared with the normal 70 percent through March 28) and a waiver of 7(a) and 504 loan fees normally paid by borrowers (through Sept or when funds are exhausted, whichever comes first).

These provisions have already proved successful in stimulating small business lending as SBA Administrator, Karen Mills reports: "The increased guarantee and reduced fees on SBA loans helped put almost $22 billion into the hands of small business owners...As a result, average weekly loan approvals by SBA have climbed by 87 percent compared to the weekly average before passage of the Recovery Act."

Read "The Recovery Act: SBA Loans and Your Small Business" for more facts about what the provisions of the Act mean for small business.

Managing the Back-Log - The Recovery Funding Queue

Small business owners who have already applied for Recovery Act loan programs will likely find themselves in the Queue. This was instituted by the SBA in February 2010 to better manage the application process for these high demand and quickly depleting funds.

With the announcement of the availability of additional funds, the SBA will prioritize loan approvals for borrowers who are already in its Recovery Loan Queue, followed by new loan applications.

If you already have conditional loan approval you should have received a loan application number which you can use to track your position in the queue here.

The Future for Small Business Lending

The SBA remains confident that it will continue to see buoyancy in small business borrowing: "Through ARRA we brought nearly 1,100 lending institutions back to the SBA’s programs that had not made an SBA loan since at least 2007," said Administrator Karen Mills.

And with the newly announced funding extension, Mills re-stated the agency’s pledge to provide small businesses with the tools needed to drive economic growth and grow jobs: "We will continue working with the President and with Congress to move forward with proposals for a longer extension for these important program enhancements, as well as higher loan limits, refinancing for commercial property loans and other significant ongoing support for small businesses."

Additional Resources

Small Business Matters is brought to you by Business.gov to provide helpful and easy-to-understand tips for small and home businesses, including direct links to resources that help business owners to navigate the government maze.  Business.gov is sponsored by the U.S. Small Business Administration to provide small business owners with access to federal, state and local government resources from a single access point. Business.gov creates a dialogue among business owners and the organizations serving them, making government resources and information more accessible to the nation's small business community.  The U.S. Government and the U.S. Small Business Administration neither endorses nor guarantees in any way the external organizations, services, advice, or products included in any external website links. Furthermore, the U.S. government neither controls nor guarantees the accuracy, relevance, timeliness or completeness of the information contained in non-government website links.

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