Last updated: May 2026

Business Loan Underwriting

How Lenders Evaluate Business Loan Applications: The 5 Cs and What Actually Gets Deals Approved

Most business owners who get declined for a loan had no idea they were going to be declined — because they did not understand what the lender was actually looking at. Understanding the underwriting process demystifies why some applications are approved and others are not, why the same business can get very different outcomes from different lenders, and what specific actions improve approval odds. This guide walks through the complete lender evaluation process — from the 5 Cs of credit to the specific factors that kill deals — with honest guidance on how bank and alternative lenders think differently about the same application.

  • The 5 Cs of credit — how each factor is evaluated
  • Bank vs. alternative lender underwriting compared
  • What automatically kills a business loan application
  • Lender evaluation scorecard and improvement actions

The 5 Cs of credit explained

The 5 Cs of credit are the framework that commercial lenders — banks, SBA lenders, and many alternative lenders — use to evaluate loan applications. Understanding how lenders think about each of these dimensions helps you anticipate how your application will be received and where the weaknesses are before you apply.

1. Character

Character evaluates whether the borrower has a history of honoring financial obligations. For business loans, this includes the owner's personal credit score and history, the business's credit history with suppliers and vendors, any prior bankruptcies or defaults, and — particularly for alternative lenders — the behavior visible on business bank statements (NSFs, overdrafts, returned payments). Character is not just about credit score; it is the lender's judgment about whether this borrower will do what they say they will do. A 680 FICO with a consistent track record of on-time payments signals better character than a 720 FICO with recent late payments.

2. Capacity

Capacity measures the business's ability to repay the new debt from operating income. The primary metric is Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR): net operating income divided by total annual debt service including the new loan. A DSCR of 1.25x means the business generates $1.25 for every $1.00 in debt payments — a reasonable cushion. Banks require DSCR of 1.20x to 1.35x. SBA minimum is 1.15x. Alternative lenders evaluate Capacity through bank statement analysis: average monthly deposits, average daily balance, and monthly deposit-to-daily-repayment ratio. For a business with $60,000 per month in deposits, a new advance with $800/day in payments ($24,000/month) uses 40% of revenue — at the edge of sustainable for most lenders.

3. Capital

Capital examines the owner's own financial investment in the business and personal financial strength. Lenders want to see that the owner has "skin in the game" — equity at risk that aligns their interests with repaying the loan. For SBA loans, a minimum 10% equity injection is required from the borrower. For bank loans, higher equity contributions reduce LTV and improve approval odds. Personal capital — the owner's personal net worth, liquidity, and retirement assets — matters because it signals overall financial resilience and serves as a backstop if the business has a temporary setback.

4. Collateral

Collateral is the assets pledged to secure the loan — business assets (equipment, inventory, accounts receivable, real estate), personal assets, or both. Collateral provides a secondary repayment source if the primary source (operating income) fails. Most bank lenders require collateral to some level on commercial loans; the quality and value of collateral affects both approval odds and loan terms. Alternative lenders typically take a blanket UCC lien on all business assets as a matter of course but do not require specific high-value collateral — making them accessible for businesses without significant hard assets. For business owners who want to understand the collateral implications of their existing loans, see our business loan terms glossary.

5. Conditions

Conditions encompass the purpose and context of the loan: what the proceeds will be used for, the economic environment and industry trends, the loan term and structure, and any external factors affecting the business. Lenders look more favorably on loans with specific productive purposes (equipment purchase, working capital for documented seasonal need, expansion with clear demand) than on vague "working capital" requests with no evident use. Industry conditions matter — a restaurant seeking a loan in a market with oversaturation faces more scrutiny than a healthcare services business in a growing market. Conditions also include the lending environment: interest rate levels, regulatory constraints, and the lender's own portfolio concentrations in specific industries or geographies.

How the 5 Cs interact

Strength in one C can partially compensate for weakness in another. A borrower with weak Collateral (service business with few hard assets) but strong Capacity (high DSCR) and excellent Character (800+ credit, clean history) can often still qualify at a bank. A borrower with lower Character (620 credit, some late payments) but strong Capacity (consistent revenue) and meaningful Collateral (real estate) may qualify with an alternative lender or SBA program. The worst profiles are those weak across multiple Cs simultaneously — low credit, low DSCR, no collateral, and recent history of default. These applicants typically cannot qualify for traditional or alternative business financing until the profile is rebuilt.

How bank underwriting actually works

Bank commercial loan underwriting is a thorough, multi-step process that evaluates every dimension of both the business and the owner's financial picture. Understanding the process helps you prepare the right documentation and anticipate the questions you will be asked.

The bank credit analysis process: The bank's underwriter — or a credit analyst — reviews your complete application package and builds a credit memo that presents the facts, analysis, and recommendation to a credit committee. This memo covers business financial analysis (3 years of income statements and balance sheets), global cash flow analysis (combined business and personal income/debt), collateral analysis, credit history review, and a risk assessment of the industry and the specific use of proceeds. For larger loans, a second reviewer or committee approves the memo's recommendation before the loan is approved.

Tax return normalization: Banks are aware that business tax returns often show minimized taxable income — owners take depreciation, run personal expenses through the business, and otherwise reduce reported net income. Underwriters perform an "addback" analysis: they add back owner's compensation (to normalize it at a market salary), depreciation (a non-cash charge that does not affect cash flow), and documented personal expenses to arrive at adjusted cash flow available for debt service. Working with a CPA who understands how lenders normalize income before preparing your tax returns helps ensure the addback analysis produces the most favorable possible result.

Global cash flow analysis: Banks look at the combined picture of business and personal finances. If the business generates $100,000 in distributable cash flow annually but the owner has $90,000 in personal debt service (mortgage, car loans, other obligations), the global cash flow available for new business debt service is only $10,000 — insufficient for most business loans. Global cash flow analysis often reveals why a business that looks profitable on a standalone basis cannot support new debt when the owner's personal obligations are considered.

How alternative lenders underwrite differently

Alternative lenders — MCA providers, online term lenders, fintech platforms — have fundamentally different underwriting models from banks. Their process is faster and more accessible precisely because it examines fewer data points and gives much less weight to documentation that banks require. Understanding this difference explains why the same business can get approved by an alternative lender and declined by a bank for the same amount — and why that outcome is not necessarily wrong.

Bank statement as the primary document: Alternative lenders typically request 3 to 6 months of business bank statements as their primary underwriting source. Everything they need to know about your capacity to repay is visible there: monthly deposit volume, average daily balance, existing advance repayments (those daily ACH debits), NSF charges, and the overall health of the account. They do not typically underwrite to tax returns, financial statements, or multi-year history.

Automated underwriting: Most online alternative lenders use automated underwriting systems that analyze bank statement data algorithmically and produce an approval decision in minutes to hours. Human review is reserved for exceptions, large deals, or applications that fall outside the automated model's parameters. This speed advantage — decision in hours rather than days or weeks — is the primary value proposition for borrowers who need capital quickly.

Credit score sensitivity: Alternative lenders are more tolerant of lower personal credit scores than banks. Many MCA providers approve borrowers with scores as low as 500 to 550; most online term lenders start at 580 to 620. Banks and SBA lenders typically require 650 to 680 or higher. The tradeoff for this accessibility is cost — the additional risk of lower credit profiles is priced into the higher factor rates and APRs of alternative products. For borrowers with strong revenue but lower credit, alternative lenders provide access at a price premium. See our guide on ISO lending for how alternative lenders and ISOs work together in the commercial finance ecosystem.

What kills business loan applications

Certain factors — when present in an application — will result in automatic decline at most or all lender types, regardless of how strong other aspects of the profile are. Knowing these deal killers before you apply saves time and prevents unnecessary hard credit inquiries from multiple declines.

  • Outstanding federal or state tax liens. A tax lien filed by the IRS or a state revenue agency establishes a government claim on all business assets — ahead of most commercial lenders' security interests. Bank and SBA lenders will almost universally decline applications with outstanding tax liens. Many alternative lenders will also decline or significantly limit offer amounts. The path to approval with a tax lien is to establish a payment arrangement with the IRS or state agency, get the lien subordinated to the new lender's claim (requires IRS or state consent and is not guaranteed), or pay the lien off entirely before applying.
  • Recent NSF charges (non-sufficient funds). NSF charges on business bank statements are the most visible indicator to alternative lenders that cash flow management is already failing. Multiple NSFs per month, or any NSFs within the last 30 days, signal that the account is already under stress. Alternative lenders making daily ACH repayments need confidence that their debits will clear. One or two NSFs over a 3 to 6 month period is manageable for many lenders; a pattern of frequent NSFs will result in decline or significantly reduced offers.
  • Recent bankruptcy. A personal or business bankruptcy discharge within the last 1 to 7 years (timeline varies by lender and loan type) is a significant obstacle. Bank lenders typically require 3 to 7 years post-discharge. Some SBA programs have 3 to 7 year waiting periods. Alternative lenders are more flexible but often still require 1 to 2 years minimum post-discharge for meaningful loan amounts. Being truthful about bankruptcy history is critical — lenders will discover it in credit checks, and misrepresentation on a loan application is a separate, more serious problem.
  • Recent defaults on existing business debt. A default or charge-off on a business loan, MCA, or credit line within the last 12 to 24 months signals to lenders that this borrower does not repay obligations. Most lenders can see MCA defaults through bank statement analysis (the ACH pattern stops before the contracted payback amount was reached) and through commercial credit reports. Addressing defaults — settling, setting up payment arrangements — before applying for new financing is essential.
  • Inconsistent information between documents. Discrepancies between the application, tax returns, and bank statements — different revenue figures, undisclosed obligations, different business addresses — raise fraud flags that result in immediate escalation and often decline. Honest, accurate, consistent documentation is not just legally required; it is the foundation of getting a loan approved.

Lender evaluation scorecard

Use this scorecard to assess where your business profile stands across the key evaluation dimensions. Strong profiles across all criteria qualify for bank financing. Mixed profiles typically qualify for alternative lenders at higher cost. Profiles with red flags in multiple categories should focus on rehabilitation before applying.

Evaluation Dimension Strong (Bank-Eligible) Moderate (Alt Lender) Weak (Address Before Applying)
Personal credit score 680+ 580–679 Below 580; or recent bankruptcy/default
DSCR (business cash flow vs. debt service) 1.25x or higher Not primary for alt lenders; revenue volume matters more Below 1.0x; business cannot cover existing debt from operations
Monthly bank deposits Strong, consistent; growth trend $10,000+ per month; consistent Declining trend; below $8,000/month; irregular
NSF/overdraft history None in 12 months 1–2 in last 3 months (some lenders) Multiple per month; any within last 30 days
Tax liens None outstanding Paid/arranged; needs lender evaluation Active lien without payment arrangement
Time in business 2+ years with documented history 6 months to 2 years Less than 3 months; or completely new entity
Existing debt obligations Minimal; strong coverage Some; DSCR still adequate with new debt Stacked MCAs; daily payments consuming 30%+ of deposits
Collateral Real estate, equipment; strong LTV Blanket lien on business assets adequate for alt lenders No collateral; existing blanket liens from multiple funders

Bank vs. alternative lender: what each weighs

Factor Bank / SBA Lender Alternative Lender / MCA
Primary underwriting document Tax returns, financial statements, bank statements, personal returns Business bank statements (3–6 months)
Credit score requirement 650–680+ personal FICO 500–580+ personal FICO (varies widely)
Key metric DSCR (1.20x–1.35x minimum) Monthly deposits and daily balance
Time in business 2 years minimum with documented history 3–6 months minimum
Collateral requirement Required in most cases; affects LTV and terms UCC-1 blanket lien filed; specific collateral not required
Decision timeline 2–6 weeks for most commercial loans; 30–90 days for SBA Hours to 2 business days
Approval cost Prime + 1%–4% APR (low cost) Factor rate 1.20–1.50; effective APR 30%–150%+ (high cost)
Tolerance for imperfection Low — credit score, NSFs, tax liens typically disqualify Higher — focus on revenue and bank statement performance

How to improve your business loan approval odds

If your current profile is not strong enough for the financing you want, the following actions — taken over 3 to 12 months — materially improve approval odds and qualify you for lower-cost products.

  • Resolve tax liens immediately. Call the IRS (for federal liens) or your state revenue agency and establish an installment payment arrangement. A lien with an active payment arrangement is far more workable for lenders than an unpaid lien. Some lenders will accept a subordination of the lien (the IRS agrees to take second position behind the new lender) — request this once a payment arrangement is in place.
  • Eliminate NSFs for 3 to 6 months before applying. Building a minimum average daily balance — even $5,000 to $10,000 — and maintaining it consistently for 90 to 180 days eliminates the NSF pattern from your current statements and demonstrates improved cash management. If your business cannot sustain a minimum balance without NSFs at current revenue levels, addressing the underlying cash flow issue is the prerequisite to any financing.
  • Apply to the right lender type for your profile. A 610 credit score applicant who applies to a bank will get declined (and generate a hard inquiry). The same applicant applying to an online alternative lender with the right bank statement history will likely get approved. Matching your application to the appropriate lender type saves time, prevents unnecessary credit damage, and produces faster results. ISOs and commercial finance advisors who know multiple lender types can perform this matching function for you — see our ISO broker program for how this works.
  • Improve your business DSCR before applying to banks. If your current DSCR is 1.05x (barely covering debt), wait 12 months while paying down existing debt to improve the ratio, or increase revenue meaningfully, before applying to a bank. A 1.05x DSCR will produce a bank decline or a counter-offer at much lower amount. A 1.30x DSCR opens up most bank and SBA products.
  • Work with a CPA on tax return presentation. Banks normalize tax returns for addbacks — but only for items they can identify and document. Working with a CPA to separate personal expenses from business expenses, accurately calculate depreciation, and document owner compensation creates a cleaner addback picture and a more defensible adjusted cash flow figure for lenders.

FAQ

Lender evaluation questions

What are the 5 Cs of credit for business loans?

The 5 Cs are: (1) Character — credit history and track record; (2) Capacity — cash flow and DSCR; (3) Capital — owner's equity investment and personal financial strength; (4) Collateral — assets pledged as security; (5) Conditions — loan purpose and economic context. Banks weigh all five carefully. Alternative lenders focus primarily on Capacity (revenue and bank statements) and Character (NSF history, existing obligations) with less emphasis on Collateral and Capital.

What automatically kills a business loan application?

Major deal killers include: outstanding tax liens (federal or state); frequent NSF charges on recent bank statements; active or recent bankruptcy; recent defaults or charge-offs on business or personal credit; stacked MCA obligations consuming 30%+ of monthly deposits; and inconsistent information between application documents. Most of these can be addressed over time — but need to be resolved before applying rather than hoping lenders won't notice.

What is DSCR and why does it matter?

DSCR (debt service coverage ratio) = net operating income ÷ total annual debt service. A 1.25x DSCR means the business generates $1.25 for every $1.00 in debt payments. Banks require 1.20x–1.35x minimum. SBA minimum is 1.15x. Below 1.00x means the business cannot cover its debt from operations — a clear decline signal. This is the single most important metric for determining bank loan eligibility.

How do alternative lenders evaluate applications differently from banks?

Alternative lenders focus on 3–6 months of business bank statements rather than tax returns and financial statements. They evaluate monthly deposit volume (minimum $10,000–$15,000/month), average daily balance, NSF frequency, and existing advance obligations. Credit score matters less — many approve 550+ FICO scores. The tradeoff for this accessibility is significantly higher cost. Automated underwriting decisions can come back in hours.

Does applying to multiple lenders hurt my credit score?

Multiple inquiries for the same loan type within 30 to 45 days are generally treated as a single inquiry by credit scoring models. Most alternative lenders use soft credit pulls for initial qualification (no credit impact) and hard pulls only at final approval. Applying to very different loan types over an extended period does generate multiple distinct inquiries. Work with an advisor who can match you to the right lender type first, reducing unnecessary applications and inquiries.

How can I improve my business loan approval odds?

The most impactful actions: resolve outstanding tax liens (establish payment arrangements); eliminate NSFs for 3 to 6 months before applying; apply to the right lender type for your current credit profile (not your aspirational profile); improve DSCR by paying down existing debt or growing revenue before bank applications; and work with a CPA on tax return presentation to produce the best defensible addback analysis for lenders.

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Get Matched to the Right Lender for Your Profile

Axiant Partners works with businesses and their advisors to match each deal to the right lender based on the actual credit and revenue profile — not the lender with the best-looking marketing. ISOs, brokers, CPAs, and consultants who send deals to Axiant earn referral fees when those deals fund. If your client needs financing and you want an expert to match them to the right product and lender, reach out through the link below.