Small Business Lending Standards - Historical Chart
Gray shaded areas indicate U.S. recessions.
Source: Federal Reserve FRED, Series DRTSCIS. Shaded areas = NBER recession dates. Updated 2026-03-09.
The Squeeze Is Real -- and It Is Not Letting Up
At 8.9% net tightening, the Federal Reserve's Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey tells us that more banks are raising their lending bar for small businesses than lowering it. This has been true for 15 straight quarters.
That number deserves context. During the 2008 crisis, net tightening hit 74.5%. During COVID, it spiked to 70.0%. The current reading is modest by comparison -- but persistence matters more than magnitude. A +8.9% reading for one quarter is a blip. The same reading sustained for nearly four years is a structural shift in how banks treat small business credit.
Here is what that means in practice. A small business owner who walked into a bank in 2021 with a 680 credit score, two years of tax returns, and a reasonable business plan probably got funded. That same owner today faces higher minimum credit scores, more documentation requirements, lower maximum loan amounts, and longer processing times. The door did not slam shut. It just got narrower -- and it keeps getting narrower.
The Two-Speed Credit Market
Large firms face a net tightening of just 5.3% -- roughly 3.6 percentage points less pressure than small firms. That gap is the story. Big companies with bond market access and multiple banking relationships can shop around. A small restaurant, trucking company, or contractor has one or two bank relationships and no alternative capital markets.
When those one or two banks tighten, the business does not have a Plan B at a comparable cost. It has merchant cash advances at effective APRs of 60-350%, online lenders at 30-80%, or revenue-based financing at factor rates that translate to triple-digit annualized costs.
Why 15 Straight Quarters Matters
The historical record shows that sustained tightening above +20% net is associated with recessions. We are below that threshold now, but the duration is unusual. Banks typically tighten for 4-8 quarters, then ease. This cycle started in Q3 2022 and has not broken.
The reason is structural, not cyclical. Banks are dealing with unrealized losses on bond portfolios, commercial real estate stress, and regulatory pressure after the SVB/Signature/First Republic failures of 2023. These are not problems that resolve in a quarter or two. They persist, and so does the tightening.
What This Means for Your Business
If you are a small business owner applying for a bank loan right now, expect to need a credit score above 700, at least two years of profitability, a debt service coverage ratio above 1.25x, and patience. Processing times have stretched from 2-3 weeks to 4-8 weeks at many banks.
If your business is already carrying MCA debt or has struggled with cash flow, the bank channel is likely closed to you until these numbers reverse. That does not mean your situation is hopeless -- it means you need professional help negotiating your existing debt, not more expensive new debt piled on top.
Lending Standards by Borrower Type -- Q1 2026
How do tightening conditions compare across borrower categories?
| Category | Net Tightening | Prior Quarter | Direction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small Firms ★ | 8.9% | 8.3% | ↑ 0.6pp |
| Large/Mid Firms | 5.3% | 6.5% | ↓ 1.2pp |
Source: Federal Reserve SLOOS. ★ = primary focus.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. The SLOOS shows 8.9% net tightening for small firms as of Q1 2026. Banks have tightened for 15 consecutive quarters. A positive reading means more banks are making it harder, not easier, to get a small business loan.
Net tightening is the percentage of surveyed banks that tightened their lending standards minus the percentage that eased. A reading of +8.9% means 8.9 percentage points more banks tightened than eased. It does not mean 8.9% of loan applications were denied.
Small firms face 8.9% net tightening vs 5.3% for large firms -- a gap of 3.6pp. Large firms have bond market access and multiple bank relationships, giving them negotiating power that small businesses lack.
Sustained tightening above +20-30% has historically coincided with recessions. The current reading of 8.9% is below that threshold, but the 15-quarter duration is historically long and signals persistent credit stress.
When banks tighten, small businesses typically turn to SBA loans (which still require bank participation), online lenders (APRs of 15-80%), merchant cash advances (effective APRs of 60-350%), or revenue-based financing. Each alternative costs more than a traditional bank loan.
Federal Reserve FRED series DRTSCIS, from the quarterly Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey (SLOOS). Approximately 80 large domestic banks report whether they tightened, eased, or held steady on C&I lending standards for small firms.