**FILE** People shop at a Black book fair in August. New LendingTree data reveals disparities in Black-owned businesses getting loans, and having the highest rejection rate of any racial or ethnic group. (Robert R. Roberts/The Washington Informer)

A new LendingTree analysis reveals that Americaโ€™s promise of opportunity remains unevenly distributed. 

In 2024, 39% of Black-owned businesses were denied a loan, line of credit, or merchant cash advance, the highest rejection rate of any racial or ethnic group. Hispanic-owned businesses followed at 29%, while just 18% of white-owned businesses faced denial.

The overall numbers may appear steady, but they mask deep disparities. 

โ€œNavy Federal Credit Union data revealed they denied African American home loan applications at a rate of 52%, Latino home loan applications at a rate of 44%, and white applicants at a rate of just 23%,โ€ attorney Ben Crump wrote on X in February 2024. โ€œWe will continue to fight for those affected by this disparity in lending!โ€

Nationally, 21% of businesses that applied for financing in 2024 were denied, nearly unchanged from 22% in 2023. 

However, the burden was not shared equally. 

Small firms, startups, and minority-owned companies carried the heaviest weight. Firms with one to four employees were denied 26% of the time, five times the rate of larger firms. Businesses operating between three and five years, often the make-or-break stage for entrepreneurs, faced the highest rejection rate at 29%.

The type of loan also shaped the outcome. 

Applicants for Small Business Administration loans or lines of credit were turned away nearly half the time, with 45% denied in 2024. Personal loans, often used by entrepreneurs who cannot access business credit, carried a denial rate of 38%. Traditional business loans were denied 32% of the time. 

These figures place a spotlight on how financial institutions view smaller, less established, and minority-owned firms as riskier bets, regardless of their potential to contribute to local economies.

Washington, D.C., shows how these national trends play out on the ground. 

The District is home to 82,666 small businesses, accounting for 98.2% of all firms and employing nearly half of the cityโ€™s workforce. 

These businesses added more than 43,000 jobs in a single year, proof of their vitality and importance to the local economy. Yet access to capital has not matched their contributions.

Black entrepreneurs own nearly 29,500 businesses in the city, while Hispanic entrepreneurs own close to 7,000. These firms are central to neighborhood vitality, cultural expression, and job creation. Still, they are often blocked from the financing needed to sustain and grow. 

In 2023, banks issued only $153.3 million in loans to District firms with revenues under $1 million, according to the Small Business Administration. Lending through small-dollar loans of $100,000 or less totaled $235.1 million. For a city with thousands of minority-owned businesses and persistent economic gaps between communities, those figures represent a deep shortfall.

Institutional practices add to the divide. Community development financial institutions, created to serve underserved populations, rejected 34% of applicants nationally. Large banks followed at 31%, and even credit unions turned away more than a quarter of those who applied. For minority-owned businesses in Washington, these numbers show the constant struggle with paperwork, credit requirements, and structural bias that too often leave them without resources.

The impact extends beyond the businesses themselves. When minority-owned firms are denied access to financing, employees lose jobs, neighborhoods lose services, and families lose opportunities to build wealth. In a city with one of the nationโ€™s highest living costs, every loan denied can mean another business shuttered, another household destabilized, and another community weakened.

Matt Schulz, LendingTreeโ€™s chief consumer finance analyst, said the lending environment shows no signs of easing. 

โ€œInflation, tariffs, high interest rates and a slow job market are making things tough on small businesses and the customers theyโ€™re trying to attract,โ€ he said. โ€œ[With] this uncertainty, banks pull back, as they tend to do in risky, unpredictable times. Standards for lending to consumers and businesses have generally been tight for some time, and thatโ€™s unlikely to change soon.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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  1. In response to recent posts about black institutions needing funding in America from Black organizations and companies if not white ones, there needs to be financially healthy Black businesses in every aspect of the US economy. This includes Black engineering firms. The US would allow Canadian, Mexican, and any other company to setup and compete, but will effectively thwart and deny the populations that make up its very own fabric such as the African American community. A community that would be definitely poised to donate and share in the upliftment of the African American experience. This active interference with Black excellence serves to stifle and rip the power of greatness from the country as a whole while we all are forced settle for subpar everything with the exception of a very small percentage of financial rapists who mistakenly call themselves Americans. Support your local Washington DC community GoGo Museum and artists like Ra Brown the spoken word poet who seek financial support from the community that has no big backers like national engineering firms to compete with the Boeings, the Raytheons, the Lockheed Martins, the Intels, the Teslas, the Honeywells, the Airlines, the TV broadcast networks, the Childrens Hospitals, the Kenedy Centers, and all the businesses calling themselves American by hiring DEI under a false flag and commitment.

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