Getting a business loan without collateral is not only possible in 2026 - it is increasingly common. Tens of thousands of small business owners every year secure funding through unsecured business loans, relying on their creditworthiness, revenue history, and business strength rather than pledging physical assets. If you have been hesitant to apply because you do not own equipment, real estate, or inventory to back a loan, this guide covers every option available to you and exactly how to qualify.
In This Article
An unsecured business loan is any form of business financing that does not require you to pledge specific assets - such as real estate, equipment, inventory, or vehicles - as security against the debt. The lender extends credit based on the financial strength of your business and your creditworthiness, rather than the value of physical collateral they could seize if you default.
This contrasts with secured loans, where the lender holds a claim on a specific asset. A commercial mortgage is secured by real property. An equipment loan is secured by the equipment itself. An unsecured loan carries higher risk for the lender, which is why rates tend to be slightly higher - but the absence of a collateral requirement removes a significant barrier for businesses that are asset-light or service-oriented.
It is important to note that "unsecured" does not mean "no strings attached." Most unsecured loans still require a personal guarantee from the business owner, and many lenders place a blanket UCC lien on general business assets. These are different from specific collateral requirements - a personal guarantee means you are personally responsible for repayment, while a UCC lien gives the lender a general claim on business assets rather than a specific pledged asset.
Key Stat: According to Federal Reserve data, insufficient collateral accounts for 35% of small business loan denials - making no-collateral financing options one of the fastest-growing segments in business lending, with the global unsecured business loan market valued at $261.6 billion in 2024.
The market for collateral-free business financing has expanded dramatically in recent years. Here are the primary financing products available to businesses that do not want to pledge specific assets.
Traditional term loans provide a lump sum of capital repaid over a set period - typically 6 months to 5 years for short and medium-term unsecured products. Approval is based on your credit score, business revenue, and time in business rather than asset value. Interest rates are typically higher than secured equivalents, ranging from 7% to 35% depending on your qualifications.
Online lenders have made unsecured term loans broadly accessible. Approval decisions that once took weeks at a bank now often arrive within 24 to 48 hours from alternative lenders, with funding delivered in a matter of days.
A business line of credit is revolving credit you draw from as needed and repay over time, similar to a credit card but with higher limits and lower rates. Most business lines of credit under $100,000 do not require specific collateral. You only pay interest on the amount you draw, making this an efficient cash flow tool.
Lines of credit are especially valuable for businesses with variable cash flow, seasonal businesses, or companies that need flexible access to capital without taking a full term loan. Many businesses use their line of credit for working capital needs, short-term opportunities, or bridging gaps between payables and receivables.
The U.S. Small Business Administration's Microloan program provides loans up to $50,000 through nonprofit intermediaries, and many of these loans are available without specific collateral requirements. Microloans average around $13,000 and are designed for startup businesses, newer companies, or businesses in underserved communities.
The SBA 7(a) program also allows for loans under $25,000 to be issued without formal collateral requirements - though the lender may still require a personal guarantee and general lien on business assets.
A merchant cash advance (MCA) provides upfront capital in exchange for a percentage of future daily credit and debit card sales. Because repayment is tied to revenue rather than fixed monthly payments, MCAs do not require collateral. They are accessible even to businesses with lower credit scores.
The trade-off is cost - MCAs use factor rates rather than interest rates, and the effective APR is often significantly higher than other loan types. MCAs work best for short-term, high-confidence situations where you need fast capital and can repay quickly from strong sales volume.
Revenue-based financing works similarly to an MCA but is based on total business revenue rather than just card sales. The lender advances capital and collects a fixed percentage of monthly revenue until the advance is repaid. No collateral required - the business's revenue stream is the security.
If your business generates accounts receivable, you can access cash against those unpaid invoices without pledging other assets. Invoice financing uses your invoices as the security (technically a form of collateral, but based on future receivables rather than tangible assets), while factoring involves selling invoices outright to a third party at a discount.
Both approaches are excellent for B2B businesses, professional services firms, staffing companies, and contractors whose cash is tied up in 30-90 day payment terms. Learn more in our guide to invoice financing.
While not a loan in the traditional sense, business credit cards provide revolving unsecured credit that can serve many of the same purposes as a small line of credit. Business cards offer rewards, float, and purchase protection without any collateral requirement. They work well for everyday operating expenses but are less suited for large capital investments.
By the Numbers
Unsecured Business Lending - 2026 Statistics
$262B
Global unsecured loan market size (2024)
72%
Approval rate at online alternative lenders
35%
Of loan denials cite insufficient collateral
10.6%
Annual market growth rate through 2034
When a lender cannot rely on collateral to mitigate risk, they look more closely at the overall health and reliability of your business. Understanding exactly what they examine helps you present the strongest possible application.
Your personal credit score is one of the primary factors lenders use for unsecured loans, especially for smaller businesses or newer companies. Most traditional lenders want to see a score of 650 or higher for unsecured products. Online and alternative lenders will often approve borrowers with scores as low as 550-600, though rates will be higher.
Your business credit score matters too, particularly for established businesses. A strong PAYDEX score, Experian Business credit profile, or Equifax Business Score demonstrates a track record of meeting financial obligations and can significantly improve your terms on unsecured financing.
Consistent monthly revenue is perhaps the most important factor for unsecured business loans. Lenders want to see that your business generates enough cash to comfortably service new debt. Most lenders require minimum annual revenues of $100,000 to $150,000 for unsecured term loans, though microloans and revenue-based products have lower thresholds.
Bank statements from the last 3-12 months will be reviewed carefully. Lenders look for consistent deposits, positive average daily balances, and no signs of NSFs or serious cash flow gaps. Strong, predictable revenue can often compensate for a lower credit score on many alternative loan products.
Most unsecured lenders require at least 6 months to 2 years in business. The longer your operating history, the more data a lender has to evaluate your business's stability. Startups with less than 6 months of history have fewer unsecured options and may need to look specifically at microloan programs, SBA-backed products, or revenue-based financing from alternative lenders.
Even for unsecured loans, lenders calculate your debt service coverage ratio (DSCR) - the ratio of net operating income to total debt service. A DSCR of 1.25 or higher is generally considered healthy, meaning your business generates 25% more income than what is needed to service its debt. Strong DSCR demonstrates you can take on new obligations comfortably.
Pro Tip: Before applying for an unsecured loan, pull your business credit report from Dun & Bradstreet, Experian Business, and Equifax Business. Errors or outdated negative marks are common and can be corrected - often resulting in a meaningful score improvement that opens better financing options.
Find Out If You Qualify - No Collateral Needed
Crestmont Capital offers unsecured business financing for qualified businesses. Fast decisions, flexible terms, apply in minutes.
Apply Now - It's Free →Requirements vary by lender type and product, but here is what most lenders will expect when evaluating an unsecured loan application.
Even without collateral appraisals, lenders still require documentation to verify your identity and financial strength. Prepare the following:
Online lenders often require far fewer documents - sometimes just bank statements and basic business info - making the application process much faster than traditional banks. For guidance on assembling your documents, see our complete guide to preparing financial statements for a business loan.
Like any financial product, unsecured business loans come with trade-offs. Understanding the full picture helps you make the right decision for your business.
| Factor | Unsecured Loan | Secured Loan |
|---|---|---|
| Collateral Required | No | Yes |
| Interest Rates | Typically higher (7%-35%+) | Typically lower (4%-25%) |
| Approval Speed | 24-72 hours (alt. lenders) | Days to weeks |
| Loan Amounts | $5K - $500K typical | $10K - $5M+ |
| Asset Risk | Lower (no pledged assets) | Higher (assets at risk) |
| Personal Guarantee | Usually required | Usually required |
| Best For | Service businesses, working capital, fast needs | Equipment, real estate, large expansion |
Crestmont Capital is a leading U.S. business lender specializing in flexible financing solutions - including unsecured options - for businesses of all sizes and stages. We understand that many of the strongest, most creditworthy businesses are in service industries where physical assets are limited. Our goal is to fund the business itself, not just the things it owns.
We offer multiple financing products that do not require collateral, including unsecured working capital loans, business lines of credit, revenue-based financing, and merchant cash advances. Our team works with each applicant to find the product that best fits their business model, cash flow patterns, and goals.
Our application process is fast and straightforward. Most applicants receive a decision within 24-48 hours, and funding can be delivered in as little as 1-3 business days for approved applicants. Unlike traditional banks, we consider the full picture of your business - not just your credit score - so strong revenue and business history can often unlock better terms even if your credit has some imperfections.
For businesses that do have assets but prefer not to pledge them, we also offer hybrid solutions that use a general UCC blanket lien rather than requiring specific high-value collateral, giving you access to better rates while protecting your critical equipment and property. Explore all options through our small business financing hub.
Explore Your Unsecured Financing Options
No collateral? No problem. Crestmont Capital evaluates your full business picture - revenue, history, creditworthiness - to find the right fit. Apply today for a no-obligation quote.
Get Your Quote →Unsecured business loans serve a broad range of industries and situations. Here are six real scenarios where collateral-free financing delivers real value.
A digital marketing agency with four employees has $500,000 in annual revenue but owns minimal physical assets - just computers and a leased office. When a large contract requires them to hire two additional staff immediately, they apply for an unsecured working capital loan. With strong credit (680) and consistent monthly revenue, they are approved for $75,000 within 48 hours. They hire, fulfill the contract, and repay the loan over 18 months from increased revenue.
A restaurant owner needs $40,000 to stock up on inventory and hire seasonal staff ahead of the summer rush. Their existing equipment is already financed, so they have no unencumbered assets to pledge. A merchant cash advance provides the capital they need based on their strong card revenue history, with repayment automatically collected as a percentage of daily sales - flexible enough to accommodate slower mid-week days.
An accounting firm with $1.2 million in annual revenue wants to open a second office location. Their assets are primarily receivables and office furniture - nothing that would satisfy a traditional collateral requirement. An unsecured term loan from an alternative lender provides $150,000 to cover buildout costs and additional staff salaries. Strong revenue and a 730 credit score get them a competitive rate despite no collateral.
An 18-month-old IT services company wins a $200,000 government contract but needs working capital to fulfill it before payment arrives in 90 days. With no significant assets to pledge, they use invoice financing - using the government contract itself as the basis for an advance. They receive 85% of the invoice value upfront, fulfill the contract, and repay when the government pays in full.
A hair salon generates $350,000 annually but faces predictable cash flow gaps when quarterly rent and vendor payments cluster together. A $25,000 unsecured business line of credit solves this perfectly - they draw only what they need, pay interest only on drawn amounts, and replenish the line as revenue comes in. The flexibility of a revolving line serves them far better than a fixed-term loan would.
A residential cleaning company with 12 employees has secured three major commercial contracts and needs to hire six more staff immediately. Their vehicles are already leveraged. A $60,000 unsecured working capital loan allows them to cover onboarding, training, equipment, and payroll while waiting for the first contract payments to arrive. Within eight months, the new revenue stream is generating more than three times the monthly loan payment.
Important: If you want to understand exactly how lenders weigh your full application beyond collateral, see our guide on what lenders look for when evaluating a business loan application.
The right product depends on how you plan to use the funds, how quickly you need them, and what your business profile looks like. Here is a quick guide to matching your situation to the right product.
For businesses that do have some assets and want to unlock larger amounts or better rates, our guide to using collateral for business loans walks through how pledging assets works and when it makes sense to do so.
Business loans without collateral are a proven, accessible path to capital for hundreds of thousands of small businesses every year. Whether you are a service business with few physical assets, a startup that has not yet built an asset base, or an established company that simply does not want to risk pledging specific property, collateral-free financing options are stronger and more accessible than ever in 2026.
The key is understanding what lenders look for instead of collateral - primarily your credit score, revenue consistency, time in business, and overall financial health. If you can demonstrate that your business is a reliable borrower, you have a strong case for approval even without assets to pledge.
At Crestmont Capital, we have helped thousands of businesses access unsecured financing that fueled real growth. Whether you need working capital, a line of credit, or revenue-based financing, our team is ready to help you find the right fit. Start your application today at offers.crestmontcapital.com/apply-now - no collateral required.
Ready to Apply? No Collateral Needed.
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Start Your Application →Yes. Unsecured business loans are widely available from online lenders, alternative lenders, and some banks. These products require no pledged assets - approval is based on your creditworthiness, revenue, and business history. Most still require a personal guarantee, but they do not put your specific property or equipment at risk.
Collateral is a specific asset (real estate, equipment, inventory) that the lender can seize and sell if you default. A personal guarantee is a legal promise that you personally will repay the loan even if the business cannot - it makes you individually liable but does not designate specific assets to be seized. Most unsecured loans require a personal guarantee but do not require you to pledge any particular asset.
Requirements vary by lender. Online alternative lenders typically approve borrowers with credit scores of 550 and above. Traditional banks generally want 650+. For SBA programs, most lenders prefer 650-680 or higher. The lower your credit score, the higher your rate will be - but many alternative lenders evaluate business revenue and history as equally important factors, so a strong business can sometimes compensate for a weaker credit score.
Unsecured loan amounts typically range from $5,000 to $500,000, depending on the lender and your qualifications. Some lenders go higher for well-qualified borrowers. The SBA does not require collateral for 7(a) loans under $25,000 and microloans up to $50,000. Most online lenders cap unsecured products at $250,000-$500,000, though exceptional applicants may access more through combined facilities.
Generally yes - because lenders are taking on more risk without specific asset protection, rates on unsecured loans are typically 2-5 percentage points higher than comparable secured products. Strong credit scores and solid business revenue can help narrow this gap. Rates for well-qualified unsecured borrowers can be competitive, particularly from fintech lenders that use sophisticated risk models to offer better pricing to lower-risk applicants.
A UCC (Uniform Commercial Code) lien is a filing that gives the lender a general security interest in your business assets - not specific items, but a blanket claim over general business property. Many unsecured lenders file a UCC-1 to protect their position. This does not mean they can immediately seize your assets, but it does create a legal priority claim in the event of default or bankruptcy. Having an active UCC lien can affect your ability to take additional financing from other lenders.
Most online and alternative lenders require a minimum of 6 months in business for unsecured financing. Traditional banks and SBA programs typically want 2 years or more. Businesses with less than 6 months of history have fewer options but may access SBA microloans, certain revenue-based products with very recent revenue history, or business credit cards while building a track record.
Yes, though options narrow and costs rise. Merchant cash advances, revenue-based financing, and some online lenders will approve businesses with credit scores in the 500-580 range if revenue is strong and consistent. The focus shifts heavily to monthly revenue and average daily bank balance. Improving your credit score before applying - even by 50-100 points - can meaningfully reduce your cost of capital.
SBA loan collateral requirements depend on the loan amount. For 7(a) loans under $25,000, collateral is generally not required. For larger amounts, lenders are encouraged to take available collateral but cannot decline a loan solely for lack of collateral if the applicant is otherwise creditworthy. SBA microloans up to $50,000 are often available with limited or no collateral requirements through participating nonprofit intermediaries.
The fastest unsecured options are online alternative lenders, which can approve and fund within 24-72 hours. Merchant cash advances and revenue-based financing are often the fastest products, with some lenders funding same-day for well-qualified applicants. Having bank statements, tax returns, and basic business documents ready before you apply significantly speeds up the process.
Revenue-based financing (RBF) advances capital in exchange for a percentage of future monthly revenue until the advance is repaid. No specific assets are pledged - the lender's security is your ongoing revenue stream. It is technically unsecured in that it does not require traditional collateral, though most RBF providers file a UCC lien. RBF works well for businesses with predictable monthly revenue between $15,000 and $500,000+.
Startups face more challenges with unsecured loans because they lack operating history, but options exist. SBA microloans are designed specifically for new businesses and often have minimal collateral requirements. Business credit cards provide immediate unsecured revolving credit. Revenue-based financing and MCAs become available once a startup generates consistent monthly revenue, often within the first 3-6 months. Strong personal credit (700+) significantly improves a startup owner's chances.
Pre-qualification and soft pull inquiries do not affect your credit score. A hard credit pull (which occurs when you formally apply) typically reduces your score by a small amount, usually 2-5 points. If you are shopping multiple lenders, try to submit all applications within a 14-45 day window, as credit bureaus often treat multiple inquiries for the same type of credit within that window as a single inquiry.
Invoice financing uses your outstanding customer invoices as the basis for an advance. You receive 70-90% of the invoice face value upfront, and when your customer pays, you receive the remainder minus fees. The "collateral" is the invoice itself - not physical assets. This is ideal for B2B businesses with creditworthy customers and 30-90 day payment terms. Your customers' creditworthiness matters more than yours in many invoice financing arrangements.
Defaulting on an unsecured business loan has serious consequences. If you signed a personal guarantee, the lender can pursue your personal assets through legal action. They may also enforce a UCC lien against general business assets. Your business and personal credit scores will suffer significantly, making future financing difficult. Lenders will typically work with borrowers on hardship arrangements before resorting to legal action - if you anticipate difficulty, communicate with your lender early rather than waiting until default.
Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for general educational purposes only and is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Funding terms, qualifications, and product availability may vary and are subject to change without notice. Crestmont Capital does not guarantee approval, rates, or specific outcomes. For personalized information about your business funding options, contact our team directly.