Nonprofits face a unique funding challenge: they exist to serve a mission, not to generate profit — yet they need capital to operate, grow, and serve more people. When grant cycles slow, donations fall short of projections, or a major program expansion requires upfront investment, loans for nonprofit organizations can provide the bridge between where an organization is and where it needs to go. This guide covers what nonprofit leaders need to know about borrowing: who lends to nonprofits, what you can use loans for, and how to qualify.
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Yes — but with important caveats. Nonprofits can and do borrow money, but the landscape is narrower than it is for for-profit businesses. Most traditional banks and SBA programs are designed for for-profit entities, and nonprofits often have structural characteristics — variable revenue, no equity owners, mission-driven rather than profit-driven operations — that make standard underwriting models a poor fit.
That said, a robust set of lenders specifically designed to work with mission-driven organizations exists: CDFI lenders, nonprofit loan funds, community development banks, and in some cases credit unions. These lenders understand nonprofit financial structures and evaluate organizations on different metrics than conventional business lenders.
The key distinctions nonprofits need to understand:
Important: Nonprofits that also operate for-profit subsidiaries or social enterprises may have more lending options available through the for-profit entity. If your nonprofit has a revenue-generating arm structured as a separate for-profit LLC, that entity may qualify for conventional business financing that the nonprofit itself cannot access.
Term loans provide a lump sum repaid with interest over a fixed period — typically 3 to 10 years for nonprofits. They are well-suited for significant one-time investments: facility renovations, technology upgrades, equipment purchases, or program expansion costs with a clear timeline and budget. Term loans require the strongest financial documentation and the most established organizational history.
A business line of credit gives an organization revolving access to capital up to a set limit — draw what you need, repay it, draw again. For nonprofits, lines of credit are particularly useful for managing cash flow gaps between grant disbursements, managing seasonal revenue fluctuations, or covering operating expenses during a fundraising ramp-up. You pay interest only on what you draw, making it cost-efficient for variable needs.
Bridge loans are short-term financing designed to cover immediate operating needs while waiting for committed future income — a confirmed but not-yet-disbursed grant, a major pledge, or a government contract payment. Also called grant anticipation loans, these are a common tool for nonprofits that have secured funding but face a timing mismatch between when work must be performed and when payment arrives. Bridge loans typically have short terms (3 to 18 months) and are repaid when the anticipated income is received.
Nonprofits can often access equipment financing for vehicles, computers, technology systems, and specialized equipment using the equipment itself as collateral. Some CDFI lenders and commercial lenders offer equipment financing to nonprofits with established operating histories. This can be more accessible than unsecured term loans because the collateral reduces lender risk.
For nonprofits acquiring or renovating a facility, commercial real estate loans secured by the property are the primary financing tool. CDFI lenders, mission-driven banks, and USDA Rural Development programs (for rural nonprofits) all offer facility financing. Owning a facility rather than renting also stabilizes long-term occupancy costs — an important consideration for organizations with multi-decade programs.
Short-term working capital loans cover day-to-day operational expenses: payroll during a funding gap, program supplies, utility bills. These are the hardest loans for nonprofits to obtain from conventional lenders but are more accessible through CDFIs and nonprofit loan funds that understand mission-driven cash flow patterns.
CDFIs are the most important lender category for nonprofits. Certified by the U.S. Treasury, CDFIs are explicitly mandated to serve underserved communities and mission-driven organizations. They understand nonprofit financial structures, accept the documentation nonprofits can provide, and often offer below-market interest rates funded through government and philanthropic capital.
Leading CDFIs that lend to nonprofits include:
Some organizations operate specifically as loan funds for nonprofits, distinct from CDFIs. These funds are typically capitalized through philanthropy and government programs and lend at below-market rates to qualifying nonprofit organizations. Local community foundations, United Way affiliates, and regional nonprofit associations sometimes operate or connect organizations to these funds.
Community development banks and credit unions, being mission-oriented themselves, are often more willing to lend to nonprofits than conventional commercial banks. Credit unions in particular — which operate as nonprofit cooperatives — frequently extend lines of credit and term loans to local nonprofit organizations that are members.
For nonprofits operating in rural areas, the USDA offers several programs relevant to facility acquisition, community facility development, and rural business support. The USDA Community Facilities Direct Loan and Grant program specifically supports essential community facilities (healthcare centers, childcare programs, food banks, community centers) in rural areas and small towns.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) offers financing programs for nonprofits engaged in affordable housing development. The New Markets Tax Credit (NMTC) program provides below-market financing for community development projects in low-income communities, administered through CDFIs.
This is a common source of confusion: most nonprofits are not eligible for the SBA's primary loan programs (7(a) and 504), which are restricted to for-profit small businesses. However, there are important exceptions:
Certain not-for-profit childcare centers are eligible for SBA Microloans up to $50,000 through approved nonprofit intermediaries. If your organization provides childcare services, it is worth checking current SBA Microloan eligibility requirements.
Private nonprofit organizations — including 501(c)(3), 501(c)(4), and 501(c)(19) entities — are eligible for SBA Disaster Loans to recover from physical and economic damage caused by a federally declared disaster. If your organization has been affected by a qualifying disaster, SBA Disaster Loan assistance is available regardless of your nonprofit status.
The SBA's Program for Investors in Microentrepreneurs (PRIME) issues grants to nonprofits and CDFIs that provide technical assistance and microloans to disadvantaged small business owners. This is not a loan for your nonprofit but rather a grant to support your organization's lending and coaching activities if your nonprofit serves microentrepreneurs.
Nonprofit loan underwriting focuses on different metrics than for-profit business lending. Here is what CDFI and nonprofit lenders typically evaluate:
Lenders want to see audited or reviewed financial statements (income statement, balance sheet, statement of cash flows) for the past 2-3 years. They evaluate revenue sources and diversity (no single donor or grant representing more than 25-30% of total revenue), expense ratios (program expenses vs. administrative and fundraising), and whether the organization is running surpluses or deficits.
Months of unrestricted operating reserves is a key metric. Most lenders want to see at least 1-3 months of operating expenses in unrestricted reserves. Organizations with no reserves are higher-risk borrowers — it signals that any disruption in funding immediately threatens operations.
A nonprofit that generates revenue from multiple sources — government contracts, foundation grants, individual donors, earned revenue from programs or services — is a better credit risk than one dependent on a single funder. Lenders assess both the stability and predictability of your revenue streams.
CDFI and mission-driven lenders also evaluate whether your organization's mission aligns with their lending priorities. A CDFI focused on community development will prioritize organizations serving low-income communities. A rural development lender will prioritize organizations operating in rural areas. Matching your lending request to the right mission-aligned lender improves your odds significantly.
Like any lender, nonprofit loan funds want a clear, specific use of funds and a credible repayment plan. "How will you repay this loan?" is the central question. For bridge loans, the answer is typically the incoming grant or contract payment. For term loans, it is typically operating cash flow. Be specific and conservative in your projections.
Lenders to nonprofits often consider governance quality: Does your board have adequate financial oversight? Do you have an audit committee? Is leadership stable? Strong governance signals organizational maturity and risk management capacity.
The most common and lender-approved uses of loan funds for nonprofits include:
Lenders generally do not want to see loan proceeds used to cover accumulated operating deficits from prior years without a clear plan for the underlying structural issue. If your nonprofit has recurring deficits, a lender conversation needs to include how the root cause is being addressed — not just how the current shortfall will be covered.
Before taking on debt, nonprofit leaders should consider whether these non-debt alternatives address the need:
Yes. 501(c)(3) organizations can obtain business loans from CDFIs, nonprofit loan funds, community development banks, credit unions, and in some cases conventional banks. The SBA's standard 7(a) and 504 programs are generally not available to 501(c)(3)s, but SBA Microloans are available to certain childcare nonprofits and SBA Disaster Loans are available to most nonprofits in federally declared disaster areas.
Key factors include: audited or reviewed financial statements for 2-3 years, revenue diversity and stability, operating reserve levels, a clear use of funds, a credible repayment plan, strong governance, and mission alignment with the lender's focus area.
A bridge loan (also called a grant anticipation loan) is a short-term loan that covers operating expenses while a nonprofit waits for confirmed incoming funding — a grant that has been awarded but not yet disbursed, a government contract payment, or a major pledge. The loan is repaid when the anticipated funding is received. Bridge loans are one of the most common nonprofit borrowing tools.
Interest rates vary significantly by lender type. CDFI lenders and nonprofit loan funds often offer below-market rates (3-7%) funded through philanthropic and government capital. Community development banks and credit unions typically charge 6-10%. Online alternative lenders that work with nonprofits often charge 15-30% or more. Mission-aligned lenders almost always offer better rates than general commercial lenders for nonprofit borrowers.
CDFI and nonprofit loan fund processes typically take 4-12 weeks from application to funding — faster than SBA loans but slower than online alternative lenders. Having complete financial documentation ready before you apply shortens this timeline significantly. Building a banking relationship before you need capital is even better — lenders move faster for organizations they already know.
Borrowing makes sense for nonprofits when: (1) the loan funds a specific investment with a clear return or program impact, (2) the organization has a credible repayment plan from identified revenue sources, and (3) the cost of the loan is lower than the cost of not making the investment (delayed program launch, missed growth opportunity, loss of facility). Borrowing does not make sense to cover recurring operating deficits without addressing the underlying structural imbalance.
Nonprofits can and do borrow successfully — the key is knowing where to look and how to present your organization's financial health in terms lenders understand. CDFIs, nonprofit loan funds, community development banks, and credit unions form the core of the nonprofit lending ecosystem, and they are better resourced and more sophisticated than ever in 2026.
For nonprofit leaders considering borrowing for the first time, the best first step is connecting with a CDFI or your state's nonprofit association to understand what options exist in your market. For nonprofit organizations with for-profit subsidiaries or revenue-generating programs, Crestmont Capital can help explore conventional financing options that may be available to your organization's commercial activities.
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Disclaimer: This article is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. Loan program availability and eligibility are subject to change. Consult qualified advisors for guidance specific to your organization's situation.