SBA provides low-interest disaster loans to businesses of all sizes, private non-profit organizations, homeowners, and renters. The Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) is a type of disaster loan, and it’s designed to provide economic relief to small businesses affected by natural disaster loans. Business physical disaster loans may be used to repair or replace items damaged or destroyed in a declared disaster such as real estate, machinery and equipment, and inventory and business assets.
Advertiser and editorial disclosure
Loan Amounts
Up to $2 Million
Interest rates
2.5% – 8% APR
repayment terms
4 – 30 years, 12 mo. deferral
turnaround time
30 – 90 days
The United States has suffered a number of major disasters in recent years, including wildfires, earthquakes, droughts, hurricanes and flooding. And, of course, the national COVID-19 crisis.
With California wildfires destroying homes and businesses, President Biden has approved a major federal disaster declaration for California. This opens up aid for homeowners, renters, and business owners.
Search the SBA website for declared disasters here.
If your business was affected by a natural disaster and you’re seeking disaster relief, you may be eligible for disaster loans from the Small Business Administration (SBA). These low-cost loans help businesses rebuild and get back to work, keeping you in operation.
On July 31, 2023, SBA Administrator Isabella Casillas Guzman announced major changes to disaster loans to increase support to disaster survivors and small businesses needing relief following a federally declared disaster. Changes are highlighted in this article.
Continue reading to learn about SBA disaster assistance and SBA disaster loans, determine your loan eligibility, and learn how you can apply for one.
Curated funding options, smarter decisions
The world's first financial health suite that streamlines access to the best financing options. Compare your top small business financing options, from over 160 financial products - with Nav.
The Small Business Administration (SBA) provides financial assistance to businesses of all sizes, most private nonprofit organizations, homeowners, and renters following a declared disaster, through its Office of Disaster Assistance (ODA). In addition SBA provides eligible small businesses necessary working capital to help overcome the substantial economic injury of a declared disaster. The SBA’s disaster loan program is the only form of assistance not limited to small businesses. This program provides low-interest, long-term loans.
SBA offers five types of disaster loans. These SBA programs are: Home, Business/EIDL (B/E), Non-profit, Stand Alone EIDL, Military Reservist EIDL (MREIDL).
In this article, we’ll focus primarily on the disaster loans available to businesses. Homeowners can get a loan for up to $500,000 to repair or replace their primary residence, or to make structural improvements to lessen the impact of future disasters. Renters and homeowners can also borrow up to $100,000 to repair or replace personal property, including vehicles, furniture, and appliances. Certain disasters may allow for higher limits, based on factors such as median home costs and construction costs in the affected area.
There will now be an automatic deferral of 12 months for all disaster loans (increased from five months previously) and no interest will accrue during that time.
Are often used to repair or replace property damaged during a disaster, such as a hurricane or an earthquake.
Businesses in a declared disaster area can receive up to $2 million to repair or replace real estate, machinery, equipment, inventory, leasehold improvements, or fixtures. An SBA disaster loan for businesses is designed to cover losses not fully covered by insurance. SBA disaster loans are intended solely for recovery efforts; they can’t be used to upgrade or expand your business. (Businesses that are considered a major source of employment may be eligible for more funds.)
Many business owners are familiar with Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL) due to the coronavirus crisis, but these loans have been around for some time. Generally, the EIDL program provides up to $2 million in the form of low-interest loans to businesses suffering economic injury due to a declared disaster. These loans are available to eligible small businesses, eligible non-profit organizations, and eligible small agricultural cooperatives located in a disaster area that suffered substantial economic injury as a result of the disaster.
EIDL loans were not exclusive to the pandemic crisis, and businesses in declared disaster areas should be familiar with them as they can provide much needed financial assistance.
The CARES Act, legislation passed during the pandemic, also created an emergency grant (EIDL Advance) of up to $10,000 that did not have to be repaid. That program was modified by the Economic Aid Act passed December 27, 2020, to provide Targeted EIDL Advances (grants) of up to $10,000 to certain small businesses. The American Rescue Plan passed by Congress March 11, 2021 adds supplemental grants of up to $5000 to businesses suffering severe economic loss due to the pandemic.
The EIDL grant program is no longer open to applications.
Get the credit your business deserves
Join 250,000+ small business owners who built business credit history with Nav Prime — without the big bank barriers.
SBA Disaster Loans carry low fixed interest rates and generally feature low fixed monthly payments. Interest rates are fixed for the entire life of the loan, are determined by formulas set by law, and may vary from disaster to disaster with market conditions.
For Business Physical Disaster Loans, the interest rate and terms will depend on something called the “credit elsewhere test.” That refers to whether the borrower has the ability to borrow from non-government sources at reasonable terms to provide for its own disaster recovery. The SBA will determine whether you have credit available elsewhere.
If the SBA determines you do not have credit available elsewhere, currently your interest rate will be a maximum of 4% and terms will be 15 years, or a maximum of 30 years.
If the SBA determines you do have credit available elsewhere, currently your interest rate will be a maximum of 8% and your loan term will be a maximum of 7 years.
SBA sets the installment payment amount and corresponding maturity based upon each borrower’s ability to repay.
The SBA now gives a 12-month interest-free deferment period for both homeowners and business borrowers. Payments are not required during that time, and interest will not accrue during the deferral period.
Note: the interest rate for EIDLs due to COVID-19 was a fixed rate of 3.75% for for-profit businesses, and 2.75% for non-profit businesses. These loans carry a 30-year repayment term.
First, both physical and economic injury disaster loans are available to businesses located in a declared disaster area. You can view the list of current declared disaster areas on the SBA website.
For EIDL disaster loans (not as a result of the pandemic), the business must be a small business located within a declared disaster area. A small business is “deemed to be one which is independently owned and operated and which is not dominant in its field of operation.”
Certain types of businesses are ineligible, including businesses that derive more than one-third of their annual gross revenue from legal gambling activities; casinos and racetracks; and political and lobbying concerns.
There are a variety of other factors that may impact whether you qualify for a disaster loan generally:
For EIDL due to the pandemic, there were some expanded eligibility requirements. Applicants must be physically located in the United States or designated territory and suffer working capital losses due to the Coronavirus pandemic. Eligible applicants included:
For a Business Physical Disaster Loan, an SBA Loss Verifier will estimate the cost to repair or replace the disaster damaged property. Since the purpose of physical disaster loans is to return the damaged property as nearly as possible to its pre-disaster condition, the loan amount will generally be the cost to repair or replace the damage, minus any insurance proceeds that are intended to cover those costs. Any other aid received (such as grants) will also likely be deducted from loan proceeds.
If you make improvements that help reduce the risk of future property damage caused by similar disasters — such as upgrading your building’s roof to better withstand hurricane-force winds — you may be eligible for a loan worth 20 percent more than the real estate damage.
For EIDL, the SBA has a couple of options for calculating loan amounts. The SBA will calculate the loan amount; you do not request a specific loan amount.
Physical disaster loans may be used to repair or replace disaster damaged property owned by the business, including real estate, leasehold improvements, inventories, supplies, machinery and equipment. Businesses of any size are eligible. Private non- profit (PNP) organizations such as charities, churches, private universities, etc. are also eligible.
EIDLs are working capital loans that are designed to meet their financial obligations and operating expenses that cannot be met as a direct result of the disaster. Uses may include paying fixed debts, payroll, accounts payable and other bills that cannot be paid because of the disaster’s impact.
There are some specific ways EIDL assistance funds may not be used, including payment of any dividends or bonuses or refinancing long term debt. Learn more about ways you can and cannot use EIDL proceeds here.
Generally, SBA loan funds may be used to relocate. However, by regulation SBA disaster loan funds may not be used to relocate voluntarily outside the business area where the disaster occurred. If it is necessary for your business to relocate outside your local area due to the disaster, ask the SBA for guidance.
It’s also worth noting that previous regulations allowed loan funds to be used to protect damaged or destroyed real property from possible future similar disasters. However, the SBA is eliminating the word “similar,” so that disaster loan recipients may use loan funds to implement mitigation measures to protect against any type of disaster, and to give them more options for protecting their property from future disasters.
To apply for disaster loan assistance, go to the SBA’s website. There you can apply for a Disaster Loan and/or an Economic Injury Disaster Loan. You will be asked questions about how long you have been in business and where it is located, as well as required to provide a financial statement, schedule of liabilities, and tax return for your business.
There are deadlines that often apply so don’t wait to apply if you think you may qualify and need this assistance.
To apply for the SBA Disaster Loan program (for loans not related to COVID-19), follow these steps:
If your disaster loan application is denied, you may apply for reconsideration. The SBA is removing a requirement that businesses who apply for reconsideration submit financial statements with every reconsideration or appeal request.
SBA disaster loans are not forgivable loans. Borrowers are expected to repay these loans. If you received an EIDL emergency advance (also called the EIDL Grant or Targeted EIDL Advance) during the pandemic it does not need to be repaid, and the IRS will not consider it to be taxable income. (Grants may be taxed at the state level; check with your accounting professional.)
You make payments on your SBA Disaster Loan directly to the SBA. The SBA now offers an interest-free deferral period of 12 months. You can repay the loan amounts in three different ways:
If you’re a small business owner recovering from floods, fires or other natural disasters, or if your business was impacted by the pandemic, SBA disaster loans can provide your business with funds to rebuild property, replace inventory, cover working capital expenses, and get back to business.
If your business was not impacted by the disaster or located in an area covered by a major disaster declaration, or if a Disaster Loan is not a good fit for your business, you may want to consider other types of small business loans.
These may include a variety of small business loans, including the SBA Microloan, SBA 7(a) loan or a SBA 504 loan to purchase real estate, machinery, or equipment. There is also an SBA Express loan, which guarantees a response within 36 hours though funding takes longer.
SBA Loan by SmartBiz
For high cost projects with long repayment. No immediate funds needed.
Pros
Cons
Funding Amount
Cost
Repayment Terms
Funding Speed
Advertising Disclosure
The credit card, financing and service products that appear on this site are from credit card, financing and service companies from which this site receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site (including, for example, the order in which they appear). This site does not include all credit card, financing and service products or all available credit card, financing and service products. All images and trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Editorial and review content is the property of Nav, and has not been approved, provided, or reviewed by the company providing the credit card, financing, or service.
For complete information, see the terms and conditions on the credit card, financing and service issuer’s website. In most cases, once you click “apply now”, you will be redirected to the issuer’s website where you may review the terms and conditions of the product before proceeding. While Nav always strives to present the most accurate information, we show a summary to help you choose a product, not the full legal terms – and before applying you should understand the full terms of products as stated by the issuer itself.
Personal FICO credit scores and other credit scores are used to represent the creditworthiness of a person and may be one indicator to the credit or financing type you are eligible for. Nav uses the Vantage 3.0 credit score to determine which credit offers are recommended which may differ from the credit score used by lenders and service providers. However, credit score alone does not guarantee or imply approval for any credit card, financing, or service offer.
Editorial Disclosure
Any personal views and opinions expressed are author’s alone, and do not necessarily reflect the viewpoint of Nav. Editorial content is not those of the companies mentioned, and has not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities.
Reviews are not provided or commissioned by the credit card, financing and service companies that appear in this site. Reviews have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the credit card, financing and service companies and it is not their responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered.