News release 25-85

SBA Releases State-Level Analysis of Shutdown Impact on Small Business Lending

With Core Lending Programs Frozen, Agency is Unable to Deliver $170 Million to 320 Main Street Businesses Each Day

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, the U.S. Small Business Administration released a state-level analysis of how small businesses have been impacted by the federal shutdown, which has frozen the agency’s core 7(a) and 504 small business lending programs. For fiscal year 2025 (FY25), the SBA guaranteed a record 84,400 loans, reaching $45 billion in capital for Main Street. Each business day the shutdown continues, an estimated 320 small businesses nationwide are unable to access $170 million in SBA-backed commercial loans, translating to $2.5 billion which has been blocked from 4,800 small businesses so far over the course of the shutdown. The loan programs are funded by lender fees and operate at zero subsidy, or zero cost, to taxpayers.

“Thanks to President Trump’s agenda to reduce taxes, regulation and unfair trade deals,  small business optimism is at seven-year highs, resulting in the SBA serving a record 85,000 job creators with $45 billion in federally-backed loans – supporting historic hiring, expansion, and confidence on Main Street,” said SBA Administrator Kelly Loeffler. “Senate Democrats have decided to cut off that momentum and that capital for Main Street, in favor of growing government spending by $1.5 trillion and blocking a clean funding bill to reopen the government. With the SBA’s loan programs shuttered, thousands of small businesses are now unable to access the vital funding they need to survive, let alone thrive – and will soon begin cutting hours and benefits, laying off workers, and contemplating closing up shop for good.”

Below is the SBA analysis by state for the weekly impact on SBA-guaranteed loans:

State # of SBA Loans Not Approved (per week) $ Value of SBA Loan Proceeds Blocked (per week)
California 212 $126,885,142  
Texas 128 $88,976,933  
Florida 135 $76,862,958  
New York 106 $40,067,129  
Georgia 49 $34,619,694  
Illinois 60 $31,284,460  
Colorado 46 $26,411,206  
Ohio 67 $26,267,104  
Pennsylvania 54 $25,961,288  
New Jersey 56 $25,824,965  
North Carolina 38 $25,613,956  
Washington 45 $24,098,402  
Arizona 36 $21,580,506  
Michigan 50 $21,476,221  
Minnesota 35 $18,011,733  
Utah 31 $17,719,531  
Virginia 31 $16,748,267  
Missouri 25 $15,664,160  
Massachusetts 44 $15,059,148  
Wisconsin 26 $14,530,523  
Indiana 26 $13,376,379  
Oregon 25 $11,749,219  
Tennessee 20 $11,412,723  
South Carolina 19 $11,157,362  
Maryland 29 $10,999,708  
Nevada 19 $10,052,313  
Connecticut 21 $9,223,113  
Alabama 13 $8,146,962  
Louisiana 12 $7,243,056  
Idaho 17 $6,980,173  
Oklahoma 10 $6,608,231  
Kentucky 12 $5,963,198  
Kansas 10 $5,158,863  
Arkansas 8 $5,056,804  
New Hampshire 13 $4,959,150  
Iowa 9 $4,325,304  
New Mexico 7 $4,244,733  
Mississippi 7 $3,974,600  
Nebraska 7 $3,730,073  
Montana 6 $3,467,817  
South Dakota 5 $3,108,338  
Maine 9 $2,853,479  
North Dakota 4 $2,811,077  
Rhode Island 7 $2,668,988  
Delaware 5 $1,959,517  
Alaska 2 $1,675,877  
District of Columbia 4 $1,664,273  
Wyoming 3 $1,627,438  
Vermont 4 $1,586,902  
Hawaii 5 $1,558,448  
West Virginia 4 $1,420,194  

To view the full data on SBA lending in FY25, click here.

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About the U.S. Small Business Administration

The U.S. Small Business Administration helps power the American dream of entrepreneurship. As the leading voice for small businesses within the federal government, the SBA empowers job creators with the resources and support they need to start, grow, and expand their businesses or recover from a declared disaster. It delivers services through an extensive network of SBA field offices and partnerships with public and private organizations. To learn more, visit www.sba.gov.

Related programs: 7(a), CDC/504

Media contacts

U.S. Small Business Administration