SBA Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL)

UPDATE 6/10/20:
Sec. Carranza indicated today that new EIDL applicants will begin to be accepted next week — they are still working through the queue of previous applicants, but as they get a handle on that, the system will be available again (currently it is only available to farmers). I have a client who applied on April 8th who received their loan this past week, so I can confirm that they really are still in-motion… when you see money suddenly show up in your bank account with “SBA TREAS” in the description, that’s probably it.


UPDATE 4/27:
As of 11:15 am Central, the SBA now notes on their website that they are continuing to review the existing queue of EIDL applications and will provide further information on new applications soon. More information in a new blog post here.


UPDATE 4/25: the EIDL program has had some funds replenished in the most recent round of legislation, and full information on it and how to apply can be found here.


We’ve spent so much time talking about PPP loans that we’ve left its older sibling, the Economy Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL), in the shadows.

The idea when you apply for an EIDL is that you need cash fast to save your business (historically, these types of loans are given out to businesses hit by a natural disaster of some type). So when you apply, they try to fund an advance of up to $10k (not necessarily the full $10k) in approximately three days — you even give them your bank info when you apply so they can deposit the funds stat.

In other words, if you meet the minimum qualification criteria to apply for an EIDL loan, and submit an online application to the SBA, you will receive up to a $10,000 advance in short order — that does not need to be repaid.

From Nav.com, a lending site I’ve used in the past for clients: If you meet the minimum requirements to apply for a disaster loan, the grant will be available to you whether or not your loan application is approved. With that in mind, if you need access to capital quickly, and don’t need a larger loan amount, this may be a good option for you.
These working capital loans (including the grant) may be used only to pay fixed debts, payroll, accounts payable, and other bills that could have been paid had the disaster not occurred. The loans are not intended to replace lost sales or profits or to pay for expansion. Funds cannot be used to pay down long-term debt. They also cannot be used to consolidate debt.

So you certainly could receive an advance, and then not be granted a loan, and yet still get to keep the advance.

But as to a question I was recently asked during one of my daily client Q&A sessions: could you get the advance… but not apply for a loan, or decide against the loan if granted? And if not, then what’s the lowest amount you could request as a loan?

From what research I’ve done (by no means authoritative, so please reach out if you discover otherwise), it sounds like you do have to apply for some sort of loan. I have not yet found an answer about how small a loan you could request. If you apply for $25k or less, there is no personal guarantee and no collateral required. Over that amount, but under $200k, will require a personal guarantee and collateral — but it will avoid some additional costs that come with higher loan amounts.

There is an interesting note on the SBA site, however:
There is no obligation to repay the grant. To receive the $10,000 emergency grant, it is not necessary to have an approved EIDL loan. However, if you are able to secure a PPP loan, the $10,000 grant will be subtracted from the forgiveness amount.

I am unsure about whether this is still true or not — it certainly was initially, but in the past week it’s been widely reported that you may receive both a PPP and an EIDL loan as long as both are not paying for the same expenses, so it’s possible that the info on the SBA site is outdated. It remains important to have a good relationship with your lender to get these kinds of questions answered before signing.

I’ll leave you with some additional info from Brian Thompson over at Forbes:

The EIDLs expanded provisions include: 

  • Can be approved by the SBA based solely on an applicant’s credit score (not repayment ability and no tax return is required).
  • EIDLs smaller than $200,000 can be approved without a personal guarantee. They are also not requiring real estate as collateral and will take a general security interest in business property. 
  • Borrowers can receive $10,000 in an emergency grant cash advance that can be forgiven if spent on paid leave, maintaining payroll, increased costs due to supply chain disruption, mortgage or lease payments or repaying obligations that cannot be met due to revenue loss. 
  • It expands access to sole proprietors or independent contractors, as well as tribal businesses, cooperatives, and ESOPs with fewer than 500 employees and all non-profits including 501(c)(6)s. 

Because lending decisions are based on self-certification and the applicant’s credit score, the review process should go quickly. CARES also waives the requirement that you be unable to obtain credit elsewhere. That means you can apply even if you already have a credit line.

You apply for these loans directly through the SBA at www.SBA.gov/disaster.  There are no loan fees, guarantee fees or prepayment fees. As of March 30, the new streamlined online application is up and running. Make sure to apply for Economic Injury for the Coronavirus, rather than physical damage due to another disaster (that is a different declaration number).

UPDATE 6/13/20: Although there is much disagreement among colleagues on this topic, according to the AICPA it is likely that EIDL grant advances will have to be subtracted from PPP forgiveness when the time comes.


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3 thoughts on “SBA Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL)”

  1. I woke up Monday morning about 3 hours before round 2 of PPP funds were set to be opened and had $1,000 in my bank account from Sba Treas. I am my only employee, thus I only qualified for a $1,000 EIDL advance. I’m now curious what I should expect next. With the SBA help lines mostly staffed by new home-based reps, it’s been hard to get clarification on this. Has anyone received an EIDL advance and subsequent offers for the loan yet, or are they still just too busy settling the advances first? If you have a dialog going for the EIDL loan, what has that been like? How long did it take from receiving funds to hear about the loan? Did they email/call/etc.? Thanks in advance!

    1. At the AICPA Town Hall on Thursday, this exact question was asked of the speaker — Doug Criscitello, Managing Director at Grant Thornton — during a special section devoted to EIDL info, and the answer was YES. I was very surprised, but when I thought about it, it made some sense, for two reasons:
      1) A true Line of Credit must be paid down for at least a certain number of weeks each 12-month period, making it technically short-term debt in many cases. Keep in mind that this is not the case for all lines of credit, and your exact terms with the lender should be reviewed.
      2) I believe the speaker may have been interpreting the question to be whether or not regular line of credit payments in the course of business would be allowed or not… and not a total pay-down of the outstanding balance. Here’s why I think this might be the case — historically, the use of EIDL funds to service regular debt payments has always been allowable. As a “working capital” loan, the EIDL is meant to be used to cover any cash outlays that would be a part of normal business operations and would have been paid were it not for the disaster. So if you have a regular monthly loan payment that you’re contractually obligated to make every period, then that would be covered under EIDL rules — it’s the *refinancing* of existing long-term debt or the *investment* in expansion or capital asset acquisition that is prohibited. This is all a long way of saying that if your business typically pays off a certain amount of the LOC each moth as part of your normal business operations (for example a retail store that always uses the LOC to gear up for the holiday season and then pays it off in the months following), then those payments are unquestionably allowable.

      So whether a full pay-down of the LOC is permitted or not would probably depend on a) the terms of your LOC (is it short-term or long-term), b) whether regular payments on the LOC are a part of normal operations or not, and c) whether the payment is a large lump-sum paydown or periodic regular debt service payments.

      I’m getting similar questions about S-Corp and non-GP partner distributions, and the answer is the same. The EIDL is not intended to be used as a loan to finance large personal lump-sum payments, but it can be used for regular distributions that are a part of operations — for example, quarterly tax distributions required by the Operating Agreement.

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