SBA Disaster Loan Program:
Frequently Asked Questions

Updated March 1, 2023
Congressional Research Service
https://crsreports.congress.gov
R44412




SBA Disaster Loan Program: Frequently Asked Questions

Summary
This report responds to frequently asked questions about the Small Business Administration
(SBA) Disaster Loan Program. The SBA Disaster Loan Program provides direct loans to help
businesses, nonprofit organizations, homeowners, and renters repair or replace property damaged
or destroyed in a federally declared disaster. The program is also designed to help small
agricultural cooperatives recover from economic injury resulting from a disaster. SBA disaster
loans include (1) Home and Personal Property Disaster Loans, (2) Business Physical Disaster
Loans, and (3) Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL). Most direct disaster loans
(approximately 80%) are awarded to individuals and households rather than small businesses.
The program generally offers low-interest disaster loans at a fixed rate with loan maturities of up
to 30 years.
Key issues of interest to Congress include:
 how the program is put into effect,
 how much Congress appropriates to the program,
 what types of loans are available to businesses and homeowners,
 the use of SBA disaster loans in conjunction with insurance,
 loan interest rates and terms for SBA disaster loans,
 eligible activities,
 loan processing times, and
 collateral requirements.
For additional information on Small Business Administration Disaster Loan Program related to
COVID-19, see CRS Insight IN11370, SBA EIDL and Emergency EIDL Grants for COVID-19,
by Bruce R. Lindsay; CRS Report R46284, COVID-19 Relief Assistance to Small Businesses:
Issues and Policy Options
, by Robert Jay Dilger, Bruce R. Lindsay, and Sean Lowry; and CRS
Insight IN11357, COVID-19-Related Loan Assistance for Agricultural Enterprises, by Robert Jay
Dilger, Bruce R. Lindsay, and Sean Lowry.

Congressional Research Service

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Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1
SBA Disaster Loan Program: General Information and Questions ................................................. 1

How Is the Program Put into Effect? ........................................................................................ 1
Can Disaster Loans Be Used in Conjunction with Insurance or Other Types of
Assistance? ............................................................................................................................. 2
Can Loans Be Issued Before the Insurance Settlement? ........................................................... 3
What Forms of Collateral Are Needed for Disaster Loans? ...................................................... 3
What Are SBA Loan Processing Times for Disaster Loans? .................................................... 3

Home Physical and Personal Property Disaster Loans .................................................................... 4
What Type of Loans Are Available to Individuals and Households? ........................................ 4
What Can Personal Property Loans Be Used for? .................................................................... 4
What Can Real Property Loans Be Used for? ........................................................................... 4
Can Real Property Loans Be Used for Mitigation? ................................................................... 4
What Are the Interest Rates and Terms for Personal Property Loans and Real Property
Loans? .................................................................................................................................... 5
What Forms of Collateral Are Needed for Home Disaster Loans? ........................................... 5
Business Disaster Loans .................................................................................................................. 5
What Type of Loans are Available to Businesses? .................................................................... 5
What Types of Organizations Are Eligible for Business Physical Disaster Loans? .................. 5
What Can Business Physical Disaster Loans be Used For? ...................................................... 5
Can Business Physical Disaster Loans Be Used for Mitigation? .............................................. 6
What Are the Interest Rates and Terms for Business Physical Disaster Loans ......................... 6
What can Economic Injury Disaster Loans be Used For .......................................................... 6
What Businesses Are Eligible for Economic Injury Disaster Loans? ....................................... 6
Can a Business Secure an EIDL and a Business Physical Disaster Loan? ................................ 6
What Are the Interest Rates and Terms for EIDLs? .................................................................. 7
What Forms of Collateral are Needed for Business Disaster Loans? ....................................... 7

Contacts
Author Information .......................................................................................................................... 7

Congressional Research Service

SBA Disaster Loan Program: Frequently Asked Questions

Introduction
This report responds to frequently asked questions about the Small Business Administration
(SBA) Disaster Loan Program. Authorized by the Small Business Act, the SBA Disaster Loan
Program has been a source of economic assistance to businesses, nonprofit organizations,
homeowners, and renters as they repair or replace property damaged or destroyed in a federally
declared disaster.1 The SBA Disaster Loan Program is also designed to help small agricultural
cooperatives recover from economic injury resulting from a disaster. SBA disaster loans include
(1) Home and Personal Property Disaster Loans, (2) Business Physical Disaster Loans, and (3)
Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL).
This report provides general information about the SBA Disaster Loan Program. For more
specific information about SBA disaster assistance for COVID-19, see CRS Insight IN11370,
SBA EIDL and Emergency EIDL Grants for COVID-19, by Bruce R. Lindsay; CRS Report
R46284, COVID-19 Relief Assistance to Small Businesses: Issues and Policy Options, by Robert
Jay Dilger, Bruce R. Lindsay, and Sean Lowry; and CRS Insight IN11357, COVID-19-Related
Loan Assistance for Agricultural Enterprises
, by Robert Jay Dilger, Bruce R. Lindsay, and Sean
Lowry.
SBA Disaster Loan Program: General Information
and Questions

How Is the Program Put into Effect?
There are five ways in which the SBA Disaster Loan Program can be put into effect. These
include two types of presidential declarations as authorized by the Robert T. Stafford Disaster
Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (the Stafford Act)2 and three types of SBA declarations.3
While the type of declaration may determine what types of loans are made available, declaration
type has no bearing on loan terms or loan caps. The SBA Disaster Loan Program becomes
available when:
1. The President issues a major disaster declaration and authorizes both Individual
Assistance (IA) and Public Assistance (PA) under the authority of the Stafford
Act.4 When the President issues such a declaration, SBA disaster loans become

1 13 C.F.R. §123.3.
2 P.L. 93-288, 42 U.S.C. §5721 et seq. For further analysis of Stafford Act declarations, see CRS Report R43784,
FEMA’s Disaster Declaration Process: A Primer, by Francis X. McCarthy; and CRS Report R42702, Stafford Act
Declarations 1953-2016: Trends, Analyses, and Implications for Congress
, by Bruce R. Lindsay.
3 Disaster declarations are published in the Federal Register. A list of current disaster declarations and can be found on
the SBA website at https://www.sba.gov/content/current-disaster-declarations.
4 Administered by FEMA, Individual Assistance (IA) includes various forms of help for families and individuals
following a disaster event. The assistance authorized by the Stafford Act can include housing assistance, disaster
unemployment assistance, crisis counseling, and other programs intended to address people’s needs. Public Assistance
(PA) provides various categories of assistance to state and local governments and nonprofit organizations. Principally,
PA covers the repair or replacement of infrastructure (roads, bridges, public buildings, etc.), but it also includes debris
removal and emergency protective measures, which cover additional costs incurred by local public safety groups
through their actions in responding to the disaster. FEMA’s PA program provides assistance only to public and
nonprofit entities. For more information on FEMA’s PA program see CRS Report R43990, FEMA’s Public Assistance
Grant Program: Background and Considerations for Congress
, by Jared T. Brown and Daniel J. Richardson.
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SBA Disaster Loan Program: Frequently Asked Questions

available to homeowners, renters, businesses of all sizes, and nonprofit
organizations located within the disaster area. Economic Injury Disaster Loans
(EIDL) may also be made for survivors in contiguous counties or other political
subdivisions.
2. The President makes a major disaster declaration that only provides the state with
PA. In such a case, a private nonprofit entity located within the disaster area that
provides noncritical services may be eligible for a physical disaster loan and
EIDL.5 It is important to note that Home Physical Disaster Loans and Personal
Property Loans are not made available to renters and homeowners under this type
of declaration. Additionally, Business Physical Disaster Loans, and EIDLs are
generally not made available to businesses (unless they are a private nonprofit
entity) if the declaration only provides PA.
3. The SBA Administrator issues a physical disaster declaration in response to a
gubernatorial request for assistance.6 When the SBA Administrator issues this
type of declaration, SBA disaster loans become available to eligible homeowners,
renters, businesses of all sizes, and nonprofit organizations within the disaster
area or contiguous counties and other political subdivisions.
4. The SBA Administrator may make an EIDL declaration when SBA receives a
certification from a state governor that at least five small businesses have
suffered substantial economic injury as a result of a disaster. This declaration is
offered only when other viable forms of financial assistance are unavailable.
Small agricultural cooperatives and most private nonprofit organizations located
within the disaster area or contiguous counties and other political subdivisions
are eligible for SBA disaster loans when the SBA Administrator issues an EIDL
declaration.
5. The SBA Administrator may issue a declaration for EIDL loans based on the
determination of a natural disaster by the Secretary of Agriculture.7 These loans
are available to eligible small businesses, small agricultural cooperatives, and
most private nonprofit organizations within the disaster area, or contiguous
counties and other political subdivisions. Additionally, the SBA administrator
may issue a declaration based on the determination of the Secretary of Commerce
that a fishery resource disaster or commercial fishery failure has occurred.8
Can Disaster Loans Be Used in Conjunction with Insurance or
Other Types of Assistance?
Disaster loans may be used in conjunction with other types of assistance including insurance but
only to the extent to which there is no duplication of assistance. Section 312 of the Stafford Act

5 In order to receive FEMA grant assistance, these entities must first have applied for an SBA disaster loan and must
have been deemed ineligible or must have received the maximum amount of assistance from SBA before seeking grant
assistance from FEMA.
6 The criteria used to determine whether to issue a declaration include a minimum amount of uninsured physical
damage to buildings, machinery, inventory, homes, and other property. Generally, this minimum is at least 25 homes or
businesses (or some combination of the two) that have sustained uninsured losses of 40% or more in any county or
other smaller political subdivision of a state or U.S. possession. See 13 C.F.R. §123.3(3)(ii) and 13 C.F.R.
§123.3(3)(iii).
7 13 C.F.R. §123.3(4).
8 15 U.S.C. §632(k)(1).
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SBA Disaster Loan Program: Frequently Asked Questions

requires federal agencies providing disaster assistance to ensure that businesses and individuals
do not receive disaster assistance for losses for which they have already been compensated. An
individual receiving federal assistance for a major disaster is liable to the United States when the
assistance duplicates benefits provided for the same purpose.
FEMA regulation 44 C.F.R. 206.191 establishes policies and procedural guidance to ensure
uniformity in preventing duplication of benefits, including a “delivery sequence” of disaster
assistance provided by volunteer organizations and certain federal agencies. According to the
regulation, the agency or organization that is lower in the delivery sequence should not provide
assistance that duplicates assistance provided by a higher level agency or organization.
SBA regulation 13 C.F.R. 123.101(c) prohibits applicants from receiving a home disaster loan if
their damaged property can be repaired or replaced with the proceeds of insurance, gifts, or other
compensation. These amounts must either be deducted from the amount of the claimed losses or,
if received after SBA has approved and disbursed a loan, must be paid to SBA as principal
payments on their loans.
Can Loans Be Issued Before the Insurance Settlement?
SBA can approve and disburse a loan for the total replacement cost up to specified lending
limits.9 However, if there is a duplication of benefits after the insurance settles, those funds are
applied to the balance of the disaster loan.
What Forms of Collateral Are Needed for Disaster Loans?
SBA will not require collateral to secure a business or home disaster loan of $25,000 or less. In
general, SBA will not decline a loan when inadequacy of collateral is the only unfavorable factor
in a disaster loan application and SBA is reasonably sure that the applicant can repay the loan.
SBA may decline or cancel loans for applicants who refuse to pledge available collateral.
What Are SBA Loan Processing Times for Disaster Loans?
SBA uses approximate processing standards based on tiered levels of application volumes for all
disaster loans: two to three weeks for less than 50,000 applications per year (level I); three to four
weeks for 50,001-250,000 applications per year (level II); four-plus weeks for more than 250,000
applications per year (level III); and more than four-plus weeks for more than 500,000
applications per year (level IV).10
According to SBA, the percent of disaster loans processed according to the tiered standard
performance goal was 100% in FY2010, 100% in FY2011, 95% in FY2012, 55% in FY2013, and
100% in FY2014. SBA noted that its lower performance in FY2013 was largely due to increased
loan volumes following Hurricane Sandy. A July 2015 SBA Office of Inspector General study
found that SBA’s processing time for home disaster loans averaged 18.7 days and application
processing times for business disaster loans averaged 43.3 days.11

9 Personal property loans provide up to $40,000. Home Physical Disaster Loans provide up to $200,000, and Business
Physical Disaster Loans and EIDLs provide up to $2 million.
10 U.S. Small Business Administration, FY2016 Congressional Budget Justification and FY2014 Annual Performance
Report
, p. 87, available at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/1-FY_2016_CBJ_FY_2014_APR_508.pdf.
11U.S. Small Business Administration, Office of Inspector General, Hurricane Sandy Expedited Loan Processes, Audit
Report No. 15-13, July 13, 2015, p. 4, available at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/oig/Audit_Report_15-
13_Sandy_Expedited_Processes.pdf.
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SBA Disaster Loan Program: Frequently Asked Questions

Home Physical and Personal Property Disaster
Loans

What Type of Loans Are Available to Individuals and Households?
Disaster loans provided to individuals and households in declared disaster areas fall into two
categories: Personal Property Loans and Real Property Loans. A Personal Property Loan provides
a creditworthy homeowner or renter located in a declared disaster area with up to $40,000 to
repair or replace personal property owned by the survivor. Real Property Loans provide
creditworthy homeowners located in a declared disaster area with up to $200,000 to repair or
restore the homeowner’s primary residence to its pre-disaster condition.12 However, the amount
SBA will lend depends on the cost of repairing or replacing the home and/or personal property
(minus insurance settlements or grant assistance).
What Can Personal Property Loans Be Used for?
Personal Property Loans cover only uninsured or underinsured property and primary residences in
a declared disaster area. Personal Property Loans can be used to repair or replace clothing,
furniture, cars, or appliances damaged or destroyed in the disaster. Eligibility of luxury items with
functional use, such as antiques and rare artwork, is limited to the cost of an ordinary item
meeting the same functional purpose.
What Can Real Property Loans Be Used for?
Only uninsured or otherwise uncompensated disaster losses are eligible for loan assistance. The
loans may not be used to upgrade a home or build additions to the home, unless the upgrade or
addition is required by city or county building codes. Secondary homes or vacation properties are
not eligible for Real Property Loans.13 Repair or replacement of landscaping and/or recreational
facilities cannot exceed $5,000. A homeowner may borrow funds to cover the cost of
improvements to protect their property against future damage (e.g., retaining walls, sump pumps,
etc.). In some cases, SBA loans can be used to refinance all or part of a previous mortgage when
the applicant does not have credit available elsewhere, has suffered substantial disaster damage
not covered by insurance, and intends to repair the damage. SBA considers refinancing when
processing each application. In addition, loan recipients can use loan money to pay their
insurance deductible.14
Can Real Property Loans Be Used for Mitigation?
A homeowner may borrow funds to cover the cost of improvements to protect their property
against future damage (e.g., safe rooms or similar structures designed to protect occupants from

12 13 C.F.R. §123.105(a)(2).
13 Qualified rental properties may be eligible for assistance under SBA’s business loan program.
14 U.S. Small Business Administration, Standard Operating Procedure: Disaster Assistance Program, 50 30 8, July 1,
2015, p. 96, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/sops/SOP_50_30_8_Final.pdf.
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SBA Disaster Loan Program: Frequently Asked Questions

natural disasters, retaining walls, sump pumps, etc.). Mitigation funds may not exceed 20% of the
disaster damage, as verified by SBA, to a maximum of $200,000 for home loans.15
What Are the Interest Rates and Terms for Personal Property Loans
and Real Property Loans?
Interest rate ceilings are statutorily set at 8% per annum or 4% per annum if the applicant is
unable to obtain credit elsewhere.16 Generally, borrowers pay equal monthly installments of
principal and interest, beginning five months from the date of the loan. The loans can have
maturities up to 30 years.
What Forms of Collateral Are Needed for Home Disaster Loans?
SBA will not require collateral to secure a physical disaster home loan of $25,000 or less. In
general, SBA will not decline a loan when inadequacy of collateral is the only unfavorable factor
in a disaster loan application and SBA is reasonably sure that the applicant can repay the loan.
SBA may decline or cancel loans for applicants who refuse to pledge available collateral.
Business Disaster Loans
What Type of Loans are Available to Businesses?
SBA offers loans to help businesses repair and replace damaged property and financial assistance
to businesses that have suffered economic loss as a result of a disaster. Disaster loans provided to
businesses fall into two categories: Business Physical Disaster Loans and EIDLs.
What Types of Organizations Are Eligible for Business Physical
Disaster Loans?
Any business, regardless of size (other than an agricultural enterprise),17 and private, nonprofit
organizations located in a declared disaster area may be eligible for a Business Physical Disaster
Loan.
What Can Business Physical Disaster Loans be Used For?
Business Physical Disaster Loans provide up to $2 million to repair or replace damaged physical
property including machinery, equipment, fixtures, inventory, and leasehold improvements that
are not covered by insurance.18 Damaged vehicles normally used for recreational purposes may be

15 13 C.F.R. §123.107.
16 SBA determines whether an applicant has credit available elsewhere.
17 13 C.F.R. §123.201(a). An agricultural enterprise is a business “primarily engaged in the production of food and
fiber, ranching and raising of livestock, aquaculture and all other farming and agriculture-related industries.” The U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) offers several programs to help farmers recover financially from natural disasters,
including drought and floods. See CRS Report RS21212, Agricultural Disaster Assistance, coordinated by Megan
Stubbs, for more information.
18 Leasehold is a fixed asset and gives the right to hold or use property for a fixed period of time at a given price,
without transfer of ownership, on the basis of a lease contract. SBA may waive the $2 million cap if the business is a
main source of employment. See 13 C.F.R. §123.202.
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SBA Disaster Loan Program: Frequently Asked Questions

repaired or replaced with SBA loan proceeds if the borrower can submit evidence that the
vehicles were used for business purposes.
Can Business Physical Disaster Loans Be Used for Mitigation?
Businesses may utilize up to 20% of the verified loss amount for mitigation measures (e.g.,
grading or contouring of land, relocating or elevating utilities or mechanical equipment, building
retaining walls, safe rooms or similar structures designed to protect occupants from natural
disasters, or installing sewer backflow valves) in an effort to prevent loss should a similar disaster
occur in the future.
What Are the Interest Rates and Terms for Business Physical
Disaster Loans
Interest rates for Business Physical Disaster Loans cannot exceed 8% per annum or 4% per
annum if the business cannot obtain credit elsewhere.19 Borrowers generally pay equal monthly
installments of principal and interest starting five months from the date of the loan. Business
Physical Disaster Loans can have maturities up to 30 years.
What can Economic Injury Disaster Loans be Used For
EIDLs provide up to $2 million to help meet financial obligations and operating expenses that
could have been met had the disaster not occurred. Loan proceeds can only be used for working
capital necessary to enable the business or organization to alleviate the specific economic injury
and to resume normal operations. Loan amounts for EIDLs are based on actual economic injury
and financial needs, regardless of whether the business suffered any property damage.
What Businesses Are Eligible for Economic Injury Disaster Loans?
EIDLs are available only to businesses that are located in a declared disaster area, have suffered
substantial economic injury, are unable to obtain credit elsewhere, and are defined as small by
SBA size regulations.20 Size standards vary according to a variety of factors including industry
type, average firm size, and start-up costs and entry barriers.21 Small agricultural cooperatives and
most private and nonprofit organizations that have suffered substantial economic injury as the
result of a declared disaster are also eligible for EIDLs.
Can a Business Secure an EIDL and a Business Physical Disaster
Loan?
Businesses can secure both an EIDL and a Business Physical Disaster loan to rebuild, repair, and
recover from economic loss. The loan amount cannot exceed $2 million.

19 13 C.F.R. §123.203(a).
20 See 13 C.F.R. §123.300 for eligibility requirements.
21 For further analysis on SBA business size standards, see CRS Report R40860, Small Business Size Standards: A
Historical Analysis of Contemporary Issues
, by Robert Jay Dilger.
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SBA Disaster Loan Program: Frequently Asked Questions

What Are the Interest Rates and Terms for EIDLs?
Interest rate ceilings are statutorily set at 4% per annum or less and loans can have maturities up
to 30 years.
What Forms of Collateral are Needed for Business Disaster Loans?
Collateral requirements vary by declaration type. In presidential declarations, Business Physical
Disaster Loans over $25,000 must be secured to the extent possible. For agency declarations,
Business Physical Disaster Loans over $25,000 must be secured to the extent possible.
The SBA administrator is prohibited from requiring businesses to use their personal residence as
collateral for loans under $200,000 if the applicant has other collateral, including assets related to
the operation of the business that is sufficient to cover the value of the loan.
SBA will not require collateral to secure an EIDL of $25,000 or less. All EIDL loans over
$25,000 must be secured to the extent possible. SBA takes real estate as collateral when it is
available. SBA will not decline a loan for lack of collateral. However, the applicant is required to
pledge by what they have available as collateral.


Author Information

Bruce R. Lindsay

Analyst in American National Government





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