A Persistent Decline in Credit Quality

For the 13th consecutive quarter, banks are reporting a decline in small business credit quality, according to the recently published Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s Q2 2025 Small Business Lending Survey.

While interest rates have eased slightly, lenders say borrower fundamentals are weakening. The top concerns are rising debt-to-income levels, shrinking liquidity, and slower income growth among business owners. These are the same red flags that determine whether a loan is approved or delayed.

Why Credit Quality Keeps Slipping

Credit quality does not fall overnight. It reflects months, and often years, of operating with tight margins, higher costs, or unbalanced cash flow. In 2025, many small firms are also facing unanticipated tariff costs, adding new pressure to already thin profit margins.

For small manufacturers and import-reliant firms, these tariffs can quietly erode cash reserves and strain liquidity—two key factors that lenders assess when evaluating creditworthiness.

As inflation pressures persist and profit growth slows, lenders are paying even closer attention to balance sheets, cash reserves, and repayment capacity.

What Business Owners Should Focus On

For small business owners, this trend carries a clear message: the ability to borrow depends less on interest rates and more on financial readiness. Strengthening your liquidity position, improving debt ratios, and demonstrating consistent profitability remain essential steps toward maintaining borrowing power.

Even in an environment where banks are lending, approval hinges on evidence of sound management and steady cash flow.

Connect with us to shape strategies that keep your business lender-ready and positioned for growth.