Business Loans for Women Entrepreneurs in the US: Programs and Funding Options 2026

Women-owned businesses represent nearly 40% of all businesses in the United States and generate over $1.8 trillion in revenue annually — yet studies consistently show that women entrepreneurs receive a disproportionately small share of small business lending. Understanding where the gaps are and which programs specifically address them is the starting point for navigating the market effectively.

This guide covers the loan products, grant programs, and funding strategies most relevant to women business owners in the US — from SBA programs with women-focused intermediaries to CDFI lenders to private programs that specifically target women-owned businesses.

For women starting businesses from the ground up, the specific challenges around accessing startup business loans for women are distinct from those facing established businesses — revenue history, collateral, and credit profiles look different at the startup stage, and the lender landscape that serves this segment is also different.

Why women entrepreneurs face different lending challenges

  • Collateral gaps: Studies show women are less likely to own real estate or other high-value assets that serve as collateral for conventional loans — a structural disadvantage in traditional lending.
  • Business size at application: Women-owned businesses tend to apply for loans at smaller sizes and earlier stages than male-owned businesses, which means they encounter more restrictive underwriting criteria.
  • Industry concentration: Women-owned businesses are concentrated in service sectors that lenders historically have undervalued relative to asset-heavy industries.
  • Network gaps: Access to lenders often flows through professional networks and referrals. Women entrepreneurs have historically had less access to the networks where these lending relationships are built.

SBA programs with strong women-business focus

SBA Women’s Business Centers (WBCs)

The SBA funds a national network of Women’s Business Centers — nonprofit organizations that provide business consulting, financial education, and loan referrals specifically for women entrepreneurs. WBCs do not lend directly but connect applicants to appropriate lenders and help prepare strong loan applications. Find your nearest WBC at sbagov/local-assistance/womens-business-centers.

SBA 7(a) loans through women-focused lenders

The SBA 7(a) program is the most broadly applicable small business loan program in the US. While not exclusive to women, several SBA-approved lenders specialize in serving women-owned businesses and bring specific expertise to structuring applications that work for this segment.

SBA Microloan program

The SBA Microloan program (up to $50,000) is administered through CDFI intermediaries, many of which specifically prioritize women-owned and minority-owned businesses. The program was designed with underserved borrowers in mind and has more flexible underwriting than conventional SBA products.

Organizations and lenders specifically serving women-owned businesses

Organization What they offer Best for
Grameen America Microloans for low-income women entrepreneurs Early-stage, community-based businesses
Accion Opportunity Fund Small business loans $5k-$250k, women-focused Startups and growing businesses
Kiva (US program) 0% interest crowdfunded microloans up to $15k Startups with no revenue history
Local CDFIs Flexible underwriting, mission-driven lending Businesses that don’t fit conventional criteria
National Women’s Business Council Resources, referrals, policy advocacy Research and program navigation

 

Grants for women-owned businesses

Grants — non-repayable funding — are worth pursuing before taking on debt, especially for early-stage businesses. Key programs for women entrepreneurs:

  • Amber Grant: Monthly $10,000 grants for women entrepreneurs through WomensNet. Annual $25,000 grant also available. Application is straightforward and monthly deadlines keep options open year-round.
  • NASE Growth Grants: The National Association for the Self-Employed offers grants up to $4,000 for members. Available to sole proprietors and micro-businesses.
  • SBA SBIR/STTR grants: For women entrepreneurs in science, technology, and innovation sectors, the Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer programs offer substantial non-dilutive grant funding.
  • State-level women’s business grants: Most states have grant programs administered through economic development agencies. Search ‘[your state] women business owner grant’ to find current programs.

Loans for women-owned LLCs

For women who have structured their businesses as LLCs, the specific considerations around LLC business loans for women-owned businesses include building business credit separately from personal credit, establishing the LLC’s financial track record through dedicated accounts, and navigating lender requirements for operating agreements and member documentation.

Practical steps for LLC owners:

  • Certify as a Women-Owned Small Business (WOSB): Federal certification through the SBA’s WOSB program opens access to federal contracting set-asides and signals eligibility to lenders that prioritize certified businesses. The certification is free through the SBA’s online portal.
  • Open a dedicated business bank account immediately: Every LLC should have a business checking account separate from personal finances from day one. Lenders use bank statements to verify revenue; commingled finances make this process harder and slower.
  • Register with business credit bureaus: Get a DUNS number from Dun & Bradstreet (free), register with Experian Business, and set up credit-building vendor accounts (net-30 terms with vendors that report to business credit bureaus).

Qualification benchmarks for women’s business loan programs

Loan type Min. credit score Time in business Revenue requirement
SBA Microloan (CDFI) 580+ Startup OK Flexible
Accion Opportunity Fund 575+ 3+ months Some revenue preferred
Kiva US No minimum Startup OK No requirement
SBA 7(a) 680+ 2+ years preferred Sufficient for debt service
Online lender (Bluevine, etc.) 625+ 6+ months $10k+/month

 

FAQs

Do I need to be certified as a women-owned business to access these loans?

Not for most private lender programs. Certification is required for federal contracting set-asides and some specific grant programs, but most CDFI and nonprofit lender programs do not require formal certification — they simply prioritize women applicants in their mission.

Are interest rates higher or lower for women-specific programs?

Mission-driven lenders (CDFIs, nonprofits) often offer below-market rates specifically because serving underserved borrowers is their mandate. SBA-backed loans through any lender are rate-regulated. Private market lenders do not differentiate by gender — rates reflect creditworthiness.

Can I access women’s business loan programs as a sole proprietor, or only as an LLC?

Most programs are available regardless of business structure. You do not need to form an LLC to access women’s business lending programs. However, operating as a registered business entity (LLC or corporation) does improve your profile with conventional lenders over time.

What is the largest loan amount available specifically for women-owned businesses?

Specialized women’s programs top out around $250,000 (Accion Opportunity Fund) to $500,000 for some CDFI programs. For larger amounts, women-owned businesses access the same SBA 7(a), bank, and online lender products available to all businesses.