Subscribe
Logo
Logo
  • Topics Icon Topics
    • AI Icon AI
    • Banking Icon Banking
    • Blockchain/DeFi Icon Blockchain/DeFi
    • Embedded Finance Icon Embedded Finance
    • Fraud/Identity Icon Fraud/Identity
    • Investing Icon Investing
    • Lending Icon Lending
    • Payments Icon Payments
    • Regulation Icon Regulation
    • Startups Icon Startups
  • Podcasts Icon Podcasts
  • Products Icon Products
    • Webinars Icon Webinars
    • White Papers Icon White Papers
  • TechWire Icon TechWire
  • Search
  • Subscribe
Reading
Get a Small Business Loan Through P2P Lending
ShareTweet
Home
News Roundup
Get a Small Business Loan Through P2P Lending

Get a Small Business Loan Through P2P Lending

Peter Renton·
News Roundup
·Jan. 19, 2011·3 min read

Of the almost 60,000 loans that have been originated through Lending Club and Prosper in the last five years we know a good portion of them have gone to fund a small business. The official numbers are around 3,500 loans or 6% of that total.

These are 3,500 businesses (there are likely more than that because not everyone states their exact loan purpose) that might otherwise not have been able to get a loan. With the excruciating tight lending standards of the last couple of years most small businesses have been left out in the cold. And with falling home prices, people have not been able to fall back on home equity lines of credit like they did in the past.

Small Business Credit is Almost Non-Existent

Getting credit for a small business, particularly a startup business is never easy. I know the pain of this first hand. As a startup business owner in the early 1990’s I was desperate for money. No bank would lend to a business that had no history and I couldn’t get a personal loan either. So, I resorted to that most convenient (but expensive) of funding tools: the credit card.  I remember one month I couldn’t make payroll, so I took out a $7,000 cash advance to tide me over. I don’t remember the interest rate but I am pretty sure it was well over 20%.

This $7,000 was what I needed to get through a difficult period, but this story has a good ending. With this money I was able to get the business cash flow positive and we became a nice profitable little business, which I sold in 2005 to help fund a new business I had started. But for a while there, things were very much touch and go. I paid off the credit card in about a year and have never had to use that kind of funding again. But it would have been great to have had the option of peer to peer lending back then. It could have saved me hundreds of dollars in interest and made success that much easier.

P2P Lending May Be a Business Owner’s Best Option

Last week TheStreet.com reported that peer lending is growing as a business owner option. It gave the example of an entrepreneur who owns a car wash and needed a $16,000 loan to expand his business. When he was turned down by his bank, he sought out p2p lending with Lending Club where he received his $16,000 loan. More businesses are turning to peer to peer lending these days because they really are an entrepreneur’s best option. If you have decent personal credit you can get a loan, because both Lending Club and Prosper lend to the individual and not the business. Of course, if your business goes belly up you are still on the hook for the loan, but the same would be true if you funded the business with credit cards or a personal loan.

Most startup businesses are starved for cash. A few years ago Inc. magazine reported that half of all start-ups are financed with credit cards. With the tight credit markets of today I would guess that number is even higher now. The biggest problem with credit cards is the high interest rate, it can cripple a start-up business that is trying to get established. A much better option is a three or five year loan from one of the p2p lenders, Lending Club or Prosper. You can obtain loans for up to $25,000 and interest rates for borrowers average around 12%, with lower rates available for people with excellent credit.

If more entrepreneurs used p2p lending for financing their small businesses I am sure we could reduce the number of business failures. Often all a small business needs to get over the hump is a little extra cash. And if they can pay this money back at a reasonable interest rate that will only help their chances of long term success.

  • Peter Renton
    Peter Renton

    Peter Renton is the chairman and co-founder of Fintech Nexus, the world’s largest digital media company focused on fintech. Peter has been writing about fintech since 2010 and he is the author and creator of the Fintech One-on-One Podcast, the first and longest-running fintech interview series.

    View all posts
Tags
credit card debtcredit crunchsmall business
Related

Christina Riechers, General Manager of Square Banking on helping small businesses

Artificial Intelligence For Small & Growing Businesses

Improving Merchant and Consumer Financial Wellness with Embedded Lending

Will Embedded Finance Make Software Companies the New Community Banks?

Popular Posts

Today:

  • Paraform Founders, Jeffrey Li and John KimFunded: Paraform raises $20M to put top recruiters, not AI, in the driver’s seat Jun. 27, 2025
  • Stylizedhouse-with-EKGFintech x the One Big Beautiful Bill Jun. 26, 2025
  • GreenliteAI-Alex-WillGreenlite AI is on a mission to revolutionize banking compliance Jun. 10, 2025
  • Ironclad State of AI ReportThe Economics of AI Trust Jun. 11, 2025
  • Revised-AI-InvoiceAI Faces Skepticism. Startups Say: OK, Pay When it Works Jun. 25, 2025
  • Ahead of AIOutsmart Pricing Objections Before They Arise with AI Jul. 1, 2025
  • SimonWu-CaptionCathay’s Wu: Secondaries now “a structural pillar” for VC liquidity, exits Apr. 3, 2025
  • TechNexus The AI IssueSteal Like an AI? Defining Fair Use & Creativity Jun. 25, 2025
  • DanMurphy-FN-headshotCFPB’s Next Open Banking Battle Begins Jun. 3, 2025
  • WP-Funded2Funded: Maze nabs $25M Series A to stop cloud breaches before they start Jun. 13, 2025

This month:

  • WP UmbrellaTo Bank or Not to Bank: The ILC Question Jun. 5, 2025
  • GreenliteAI-Alex-WillGreenlite AI is on a mission to revolutionize banking compliance Jun. 10, 2025
  • Current stablecoin adoptionWhy Banks (and Fintechs) Need to Embrace Stablecoins Today Jun. 12, 2025
  • ai-work-nexusWalkMe Vets Declare War on SaaS Bloat with $10M Seed for Autonomous Agents Jun. 10, 2025
  • DanMurphy-FN-headshotCFPB’s Next Open Banking Battle Begins Jun. 3, 2025
  • Jon StonaTips from Airwallex x McLaren on Making the Best of a Fintech Sponsorship  Jun. 18, 2025
  • Ironclad State of AI ReportThe Economics of AI Trust Jun. 11, 2025
  • Email-AI-pieceAvatar CEOs Have Entered the Meeting Jun. 18, 2025
  • Ben Hemani, Founding Partner at Bison VenturesThe Risk and Reward of Betting Big on AI’s Next Frontier Jun. 4, 2025
  • Globe-money-symbolsOPINION: Why Brazil and India are leading the global digital shift through payment innovation Jun. 24, 2025

  • About
  • Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
Subscribe
Copyright © 2025 Fintech Nexus
  • Topics
    • AI
    • Banking
    • Blockchain/DeFi
    • Embedded Finance
    • Fraud/Identity
    • Investing
    • Lending
    • Payments
    • Regulation
    • Startups
  • Podcasts
  • Products
    • Webinars
    • White Papers
  • TechWire
  • Contact Us
Start typing to see results or hit ESC to close
lis digital banking USA Lending Club UK
See all results