Last week, we discussed how credit shapes small business lender readiness.
So, what actually happens when a loan request moves from conversation to credit review?
Recently published Federal Reserve data gives us a clearer picture. In the 2026 Report on Employer Firms, among businesses that did not receive the full amount of financing they requested, 46 percent said lender requirements were too strict. Thirty-seven percent reported having too much existing debt. Thirty percent cited a low credit score. Twenty-nine percent pointed to insufficient collateral. 2026 Report on Employer Firms
These are not small technicalities. They are the kinds of issues that can quietly derail an application.
Credit challenges rarely stand alone. High utilization, layered debt, uneven payment history, or limited collateral tend to build on each other. An owner may feel confident walking into a meeting, only to discover that leverage levels or credit patterns change the lender’s comfort level.
National Credit Education Month is not just about checking your score. It is about understanding how your full financial profile is viewed across the table. Is your debt load already stretched? Are payments consistent? Does your credit history reflect discipline over time? If additional collateral were required, would it be available?
Preparation shifts that conversation.
Our Becoming Bankable® program was created to help business owners address these questions before they apply. We break down the 5 C’s of Credit in practical terms, review financial statements and debt structure, and help you see your business the way a lender does.
Credit education is not about reacting to a denial. It is about positioning your business to avoid one.