When your business needs capital, one of the most important decisions you will face is whether to pursue a secured or unsecured business loan. These two loan types differ significantly in how they work, what they require, and who qualifies for them. Understanding the distinction can save you time, money, and considerable risk.
Whether you are launching a new venture, managing a cash flow gap, or investing in growth, knowing the difference between secured and unsecured business loans helps you apply with confidence and negotiate from a position of strength. This guide breaks down every key consideration so you can make the right financing choice for your business.
In This Article
A secured business loan is a form of financing backed by collateral - a physical or financial asset the lender can claim if you default on the loan. Common examples include equipment loans backed by the equipment itself, SBA loans secured by business assets, or commercial real estate loans backed by property. The collateral reduces the lender's risk, which typically results in lower interest rates and higher loan amounts for the borrower.
An unsecured business loan, by contrast, requires no specific collateral. Instead, the lender approves the loan based on your business's creditworthiness, cash flow, revenue history, and overall financial health. Because the lender is taking on more risk without a physical asset to fall back on, unsecured loans often carry higher interest rates and stricter qualification criteria - though they are also faster to obtain and easier to apply for.
Both types of loans serve important purposes. The right choice depends on your business's assets, credit profile, funding timeline, and how much risk you are willing to accept.
Key Stat: According to the Federal Reserve's Small Business Credit Survey, approximately 70% of small businesses that applied for financing in recent years sought some form of business loan or line of credit - and understanding the secured vs. unsecured distinction was a top knowledge gap reported by applicants.
The most fundamental difference between these two loan types is the collateral requirement. With a secured loan, your lender has a legal claim on a specific asset if you fail to repay. With an unsecured loan, there is no such direct claim - though the lender may still pursue legal action, require a personal guarantee, or report defaults to credit bureaus.
Beyond collateral, the two loan types diverge in several other important areas including interest rates, loan amounts, repayment terms, funding speed, and qualification requirements. Understanding these differences will help you identify which type aligns with your business goals and financial situation.
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Apply Now and Get Matched →A secured loan works by tying the borrowed funds to a specific piece of collateral. When the lender approves your application, they place a lien on the collateral, which means they have a legal right to seize and sell that asset if you stop making payments. This arrangement allows lenders to offer better terms because they have a guaranteed way to recover their funds.
The process of obtaining a secured business loan typically involves an appraisal or valuation of the collateral. Lenders want to confirm that the asset is worth enough to cover the loan balance in a worst-case scenario. They may also require documentation like titles, deeds, or serial numbers to establish the lien properly.
Secured loans are most common for large capital expenditures - things like commercial real estate purchases, heavy equipment, fleet vehicles, or manufacturing machinery. The asset you are purchasing often serves as the collateral itself, which simplifies the process considerably. SBA 7(a) and 504 loans are also secured products, typically backed by business assets and sometimes by real estate.
One important consideration with secured loans is the relationship between loan-to-value ratio (LTV) and how much you can borrow. Lenders rarely lend 100% of an asset's value. Most will lend between 70% and 90% of the appraised value, depending on the asset type and your creditworthiness. Equipment and vehicles tend to have lower LTV ratios than real estate because they depreciate faster.
Important Note: Even with a secured loan, many lenders - especially SBA lenders and traditional banks - may still require a personal guarantee. A personal guarantee means you are personally liable for repayment even if your business cannot pay, regardless of whether the collateral has already been seized.
An unsecured business loan is approved and funded based entirely on your business's financial profile. The lender reviews your credit score, business credit history, monthly revenue, time in business, and sometimes your industry sector. Without collateral to fall back on, lenders have to be more selective about who they fund, and they compensate for the added risk by charging higher rates.
What unsecured loans lack in favorable rates, they often make up for in speed and simplicity. Because there is no collateral to appraise or lien to file, the application and approval process is typically much faster than a secured loan. Many unsecured lenders can approve and fund applications within one to three business days. Online lenders and alternative financing companies have made this process even faster in recent years.
Common unsecured products include unsecured working capital loans, business lines of credit, merchant cash advances, and some term loans offered by online lenders. Revenue-based financing is also technically unsecured, with repayment tied to a percentage of your daily revenue rather than a fixed payment schedule.
It is worth noting that many unsecured loans still include a personal guarantee clause. While the lender cannot immediately seize a specific asset if you default, a personal guarantee means they can pursue your personal assets through legal channels. This is an important distinction that many borrowers overlook when they assume an unsecured loan protects their personal finances completely.
By the Numbers
Secured vs. Unsecured Business Loans - Key Statistics
6-8%
Typical rate range for secured SBA loans (7(a) program, 2026)
15-45%
Typical APR range for unsecured business loans from online lenders
$5M+
Maximum available with secured SBA 504 program
24 Hrs
Typical funding timeline for unsecured online business loans
When applying for a secured business loan, the type of collateral you offer matters significantly. Different asset types are valued differently, carry different risks, and may affect the interest rate and loan-to-value ratio you receive. Here are the most common types of collateral used in business lending:
Real property is the most prized form of collateral because it tends to hold its value over time and can be sold relatively easily. Commercial real estate loans - whether for purchasing a building or using existing property as security - often come with the best terms available in business lending. Lenders typically lend up to 75-80% of the appraised property value.
Business equipment is commonly used as collateral, particularly in equipment financing arrangements where the purchased equipment serves as its own security. Equipment financing from Crestmont Capital allows businesses to acquire new or used machinery while using that equipment as collateral. Because equipment depreciates, lenders typically lend 70-80% of appraised value.
Outstanding invoices can serve as collateral for asset-based lending or invoice financing. Lenders typically advance 70-85% of the face value of eligible receivables. This works well for businesses with slow-paying clients that need to bridge the gap between invoicing and payment.
For product-based businesses, inventory can serve as collateral through inventory financing arrangements. Lenders are generally more cautious with inventory as collateral because it can be difficult to sell quickly if you default. Typical advance rates are 50-65% of inventory value.
Commercial vehicles - from delivery vans to semi-trucks - commonly serve as collateral for vehicle loans. The vehicle itself secures the financing, which is why fleet financing and truck loans are available at competitive rates. Lenders can repossess and resell vehicles quickly, making them acceptable collateral.
Some secured loans use a blanket lien, which gives the lender a security interest in all of your business assets - including equipment, vehicles, receivables, and sometimes inventory. This is common with SBA loans and some conventional bank loans. A blanket lien means the lender can pursue any business asset, not just a specific one.
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Start Your Application →The cost of borrowing is one of the clearest differences between secured and unsecured business loans. Because secured loans pose less risk to lenders, they consistently come with lower interest rates. The difference can be dramatic - especially compared to high-cost unsecured options like merchant cash advances.
For secured loans, interest rates typically range from 5% to 12% APR for conventional bank loans and SBA products. Equipment financing from specialized lenders might range from 6% to 15% depending on the borrower's credit profile and the equipment being financed. Commercial real estate loans may come in even lower for well-qualified borrowers.
For unsecured business loans, rates vary significantly based on the lender type and your qualifications. Bank-issued unsecured term loans may start around 10% APR for highly qualified borrowers. Online lender unsecured loans typically range from 15% to 45% APR. High-cost products like merchant cash advances or short-term bridge loans can carry effective APRs of 50% to 150% or more, though they are described differently (as factor rates rather than interest rates).
Repayment term length also differs markedly. Secured loans tied to long-lived assets like real estate can extend 15 to 25 years. Equipment loans typically run 3 to 7 years. SBA 7(a) loans can reach up to 10 years for working capital and 25 years for real estate.
Unsecured loans tend to be shorter. Most unsecured term loans from online lenders run 6 months to 3 years. Short-term unsecured loans for working capital or inventory often run just 3 to 18 months. Lines of credit - which are technically unsecured revolving facilities - typically renew annually.
Secured loans can be significantly larger. SBA 504 loans can reach $5 million or more. Commercial real estate loans regularly exceed $1 million. Equipment financing can extend to the full purchase price of expensive machinery.
Unsecured loans are generally smaller, typically capped at $500,000 or less from online lenders. Banks may offer larger unsecured lines of credit for highly creditworthy established businesses, but these are the exception rather than the rule.
The qualification process for secured and unsecured loans differs in several important ways. Understanding what lenders are looking for helps you prepare your application and set realistic expectations.
To qualify for a secured business loan, lenders primarily evaluate the quality and value of the collateral first, then your business creditworthiness. Key factors include:
Without collateral, lenders focus entirely on your creditworthiness and cash flow. Key factors include:
Pro Tip: If you do not meet the requirements for an unsecured loan from a traditional bank, you may still qualify through an alternative lender. Crestmont Capital works with businesses across a wide range of credit profiles and revenue levels, offering flexible solutions for businesses that traditional banks frequently decline.
Choosing between secured and unsecured financing is not always a straightforward decision. The right choice depends on several factors unique to your business, including your asset base, credit profile, funding timeline, and how you plan to use the capital.
Many businesses actually use both types strategically. You might use a secured equipment loan to finance new machinery at a low rate while using an unsecured business line of credit for day-to-day operational expenses. Combining loan types is a sound capital allocation strategy for growing businesses.
| Feature | Secured Business Loan | Unsecured Business Loan |
|---|---|---|
| Collateral Required | Yes - specific asset or blanket lien | No (but may require personal guarantee) |
| Interest Rates | 5% - 12% APR (bank/SBA) | 15% - 45%+ APR (online lenders) |
| Loan Amounts | $50,000 - $5M+ | $10,000 - $500,000 |
| Repayment Terms | 1 - 25 years | 6 months - 3 years |
| Funding Speed | 1 - 6 weeks (SBA up to 90 days) | 24 hours - 1 week |
| Min. Credit Score | 650+ (collateral compensates) | 600 - 680+ depending on lender |
| Asset Risk | Lender can seize collateral on default | No direct asset seizure (legal action possible) |
| Best For | Equipment, real estate, large capital needs | Working capital, cash flow, service businesses |
| Application Complexity | Higher - appraisals, lien filing required | Lower - mainly financial statements and revenue proof |
To make these concepts concrete, here are scenarios where each loan type makes practical sense:
Maria owns a successful Mediterranean restaurant that has been operating for four years. She wants to open a second location and needs $350,000 for buildout, equipment, and initial inventory. Because she already owns her first location's commercial kitchen equipment outright, she can use it as collateral for a secured business loan. This allows her to secure a 7-year term at 9% APR rather than the 28% she was quoted on an unsecured option. Her monthly payment is substantially lower, improving the new location's cash flow from day one.
James runs a staffing agency that places healthcare workers. His agency has strong revenue but experiences a cash flow gap every month because he pays his contractors weekly while his healthcare clients pay invoices on 60-day terms. Because the agency has no significant physical assets, a secured loan is not an option. Instead, James uses an unsecured working capital line of credit that he draws on each week to cover payroll and repays when client payments arrive. The higher rate is a cost of doing business that is far less expensive than losing contracts because he cannot fund payroll.
David runs a mid-size commercial construction company and needs a new excavator worth $280,000. He uses equipment financing where the excavator itself serves as collateral. This keeps his other business assets free and unencumbered, his rate is competitive at 7.5%, and the loan term of 60 months matches the useful life of the equipment. The excavator generates enough revenue on projects to cover the monthly payment many times over.
Sofia opened a boutique clothing store 14 months ago. She needs $60,000 for a major inventory expansion ahead of the holiday season. She has been in business less than two years and her credit score is 640, which makes her a borderline candidate for many lenders. She does not have real estate or equipment worth pledging as collateral. After working with Crestmont Capital, she qualifies for an unsecured small business loan based on her consistent monthly revenue of $45,000. She funds the inventory, generates strong holiday sales, and repays the loan within 9 months.
Dr. Chen wants to add a second treatment room and purchase a new digital X-ray system for $95,000. She uses dental equipment financing where the new equipment serves as collateral. With a strong credit score (760), six years of practice history, and excellent cash flow, she qualifies at 6.8% for a 48-month term. Her monthly payment fits comfortably within the additional revenue the new treatment room will generate.
Marcus operates a regional trucking company with 12 trucks. One of his vehicles breaks down unexpectedly and he needs $30,000 for emergency repairs within 48 hours to avoid losing a major client contract. A secured loan would take weeks. Instead, he uses an unsecured emergency business loan that is approved the same day and funds the next morning. The higher rate on this short-term loan is far less costly than losing the client contract permanently.
At Crestmont Capital, we work with businesses across the full spectrum of financing needs - from secured equipment loans to fast unsecured working capital. As one of the leading business lenders in the United States, we have helped thousands of business owners navigate the secured vs. unsecured decision and secure the right type of capital for their situation.
Our team does not believe in a one-size-fits-all approach. We evaluate your specific business - your assets, your revenue, your credit profile, and your goals - and match you with the financing structure that makes the most sense. For many clients, the right answer is a combination of secured and unsecured products working together to address both long-term capital needs and short-term cash flow requirements.
Whether you need equipment financing with the equipment as collateral, an SBA loan for a major expansion, a business line of credit for ongoing working capital needs, or a fast unsecured working capital loan, Crestmont Capital has the product and the expertise to help you succeed. We work with a wide range of industries, credit profiles, and business sizes.
Our application process is straightforward and designed to minimize the burden on you. For unsecured products, we typically need just three to six months of bank statements, basic business information, and identification. For secured loans, we will guide you through the additional documentation requirements. In many cases, we can provide same-day approvals and have funds in your account within 24 to 72 hours.
The main difference is collateral. A secured business loan requires you to pledge a specific asset - such as equipment, real estate, or inventory - as security for the loan. If you default, the lender can seize that asset. An unsecured business loan requires no collateral; instead, approval is based on your creditworthiness, revenue, and business history. Unsecured loans are faster to obtain but typically carry higher interest rates.
Yes, it is possible to qualify for an unsecured business loan with bad credit, but it is more challenging. Alternative and online lenders often have more flexible credit requirements than traditional banks. Some lenders will approve applicants with scores as low as 550 to 600 if the business has strong monthly revenue and consistent cash flow. Expect higher rates and lower loan amounts if your credit score is below 650.
Acceptable collateral types include commercial real estate, business equipment and machinery, fleet vehicles, accounts receivable, inventory, and sometimes personal real estate. The value and liquidity of the asset determines how much a lender will advance against it. Equipment depreciates faster than real estate, so lenders typically advance a smaller percentage of equipment value compared to property value.
No. While unsecured loans do not require specific collateral, many lenders still require a personal guarantee, which makes you personally liable for repayment even if the business cannot pay. Additionally, defaulting on an unsecured loan will damage your business and personal credit scores, and lenders can pursue legal action to collect through judgments that may affect your personal assets. Unsecured does not mean consequence-free.
Secured loans generally allow for much higher borrowing amounts. SBA 504 loans can reach $5 million or more. Equipment loans and real estate loans can easily exceed $1 million for well-qualified borrowers. Unsecured loans are typically capped at $500,000 or less from most lenders, with many online lenders capping at $250,000. The amount you can borrow also depends on your revenue, credit score, and business financials regardless of loan type.
Credit score requirements vary by lender and loan type. SBA loans typically require a personal credit score of at least 680. Conventional bank secured loans often require 650 or higher. Equipment financing from alternative lenders may approve scores as low as 600 to 620 if the collateral is strong. Keep in mind that the strength of the collateral can partially offset a lower credit score in a secured lending decision.
Unsecured loans fund significantly faster. Online unsecured lenders often approve and fund within 24 to 72 hours. Secured loans take longer due to appraisal requirements, lien documentation, and more thorough underwriting. Equipment loans from alternative lenders may fund in 3 to 7 days. Conventional bank secured loans often take 2 to 4 weeks. SBA loans can take 30 to 90 days or more depending on the program and complexity.
No, they are different. Collateral is a specific asset pledged as security for the loan. A personal guarantee is a legal promise that you as an individual will repay the debt if the business cannot. With a personal guarantee, the lender can pursue your personal assets - savings, home, vehicle - if the business defaults. Many lenders require both collateral AND a personal guarantee. A personal guarantee without specific collateral pledged is typical in unsecured lending.
You cannot directly convert an unsecured loan to a secured one with the same lender in most cases. However, you can refinance your existing unsecured loan by obtaining a new secured loan and using the proceeds to pay off the unsecured balance. This strategy makes sense if you now have assets to pledge and want to reduce your interest rate or extend your repayment term. Refinancing business debt is a legitimate strategy once your business has grown and acquired assets.
A specific collateral lien ties the loan to one particular asset - for example, a specific piece of equipment or a specific property. A blanket lien gives the lender a security interest in all of your business assets, including equipment, vehicles, receivables, and inventory. SBA loans and many bank loans use blanket liens. A blanket lien is broader and can be more restrictive because it encumbers all business assets, potentially making it harder to sell equipment or obtain additional financing without the lender's consent.
Startups can qualify for some types of secured financing, particularly equipment loans and vehicle loans where the purchased asset itself serves as collateral. These loans are available even for new businesses because the lender's risk is mitigated by the asset. SBA loans and conventional bank secured loans typically require 2 or more years of operating history, making them difficult for true startups. If you are a new business owner, equipment financing is often the most accessible form of secured financing.
With a secured loan, the lender's first recourse is to seize and sell the collateral. If the collateral sale does not cover the full loan balance, the lender may pursue a deficiency judgment for the remaining amount. With an unsecured loan, the lender does not have a specific asset to seize, but they can report the default to credit bureaus, send the debt to collections, or file a civil lawsuit seeking a judgment. Both types of default seriously damage your credit and can have long-term consequences for your ability to obtain financing.
Yes, many successful businesses use both types simultaneously. A common strategy is to use secured financing for major asset purchases - equipment, real estate, or vehicles - to keep the cost of capital low, while maintaining an unsecured line of credit for day-to-day working capital needs. The key is ensuring your total debt service is manageable relative to your cash flow, maintaining a healthy debt service coverage ratio across all obligations.
Business lines of credit can be either secured or unsecured. Many banks offer secured lines of credit backed by accounts receivable, inventory, or other assets, sometimes called asset-based lending or revolving credit facilities. Unsecured lines of credit are also available, typically in smaller amounts and at higher rates. Most small business lines of credit from online lenders and many banks are technically unsecured but may require a personal guarantee. The line functions the same either way - you draw what you need and repay as you go.
The fastest way to find out is to apply with a lender or financing advisor who can evaluate your full profile. Key factors include your credit scores (personal and business), monthly revenue, time in business, existing debt, and whether you have assets that could serve as collateral. Crestmont Capital can review your situation and tell you exactly what products you qualify for - both secured and unsecured - so you can make an informed decision without wasting time on applications you are unlikely to be approved for.
Understanding the difference between secured vs. unsecured business loans is fundamental to making smart financing decisions for your business. Secured loans offer lower rates, higher amounts, and longer terms at the cost of pledging an asset and navigating a more complex application process. Unsecured loans offer speed, simplicity, and flexibility at the cost of higher rates and smaller borrowing limits.
Neither type is inherently better. The right choice depends on your unique situation - your assets, your credit profile, how quickly you need funds, and what you plan to do with the capital. Many businesses benefit from using both strategically over time. The goal is always to match the right financing tool to the right business need.
Crestmont Capital is here to help you navigate this decision. Whether you need a secured equipment loan at competitive rates or a fast unsecured working capital injection, our team will find the right solution for your business. Apply today and find out exactly what you qualify for.
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Apply Now →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.