Small Business Notes

 
Google

Frequently Asked Questions about Economic Injury Disaster Loans


   

1. How may I use an EIDL? Answer
2. How much money may I borrow? Answer
3. Must I submit a personal financial statement with my loan application? Answer
4. Must I sell assets that are not used in my regular business operations before I am eligible for an EIDL? Answer
5. If I can borrow from a bank, am I still eligible for SBA assistance? Answer
6. What are some prohibited uses of an EIDL? Answer
7. Is collateral required for an EIDL Answer
8. How long will I have to pay off the SBA loan? Answer
9. What kind of documentation should I use to show my losses? Answer
10. If I receive an EIDL, may I spend the loan money any way I want? Answer
11. May I expand my business facilities or purchase a new line of inventory with an EIDL? Answer
12. If I show the SBA that I am not making a profit, is that enough to qualify me for an EIDL? Answer
13. Are religious and nonprofit organizations eligible for an EIDL? Answer
14. How soon will I know if I get the loan? Answer
15. How soon can I expect the money? Answer
16. Is flood insurance needed to get a loan? Answer


1. How may I use an EIDL?

The loan will provide you with operating funds until your business recovers. To the extent you could have made payments had the disaster not occurred, you may use the loan to make payments
on short-term notes, accounts payable and installment payments on long-term notes. (See SBA publication No. DA-2, Physical Disaster Business Loans.)

Back to Top

2. How much money may I borrow?

You may request an EIDL for the amount of economic injury and operating needs, but not in excess of what your business could have paid had the disaster not occurred. In determining your eligible amount, the SBA will look at:

  • the total of your debt obligations;
  • operating expenses that mature during the period affected by the disaster, plus the amount you need to maintain a reasonable working capital position during that period;
  • and expenses you could have met and a working capital position you could have maintained had the disaster not occurred.

The amount of your economic injury does not automatically represent the dollar amount of your loan eligibility; the SBA will evaluate the information you provide and determine the reasonableness of your loan request.

Back to Top

3. Must I submit a personal financial statement with my loan application?

Yes. The SBA must review your financial statement and one for each partner, officer, director and stockholder with 20 percent or more ownership. The SBA requires the principals of the business to personally guarantee repayment of the loan and, in some instances, to secure the loan by pledging additional collateral.

Back to Top

4. Must I sell assets that are not used in my regular business operations before I am eligible for an EIDL?

The SBA will review the availability of such assets to determine if part or all of your economic injury might be remedied by using such assets. The business and its principal owners must use their own resources to overcome the economic injury to the greatest extent possible without causing undue hardship.

Back to Top

5. If I can borrow from a bank, am I still eligible for SBA assistance?

Private credit sources must be used as much as possible to overcome the economic injury. The SBA can provide EIDL assistance only to the extent the business (and its principals) cannot recover by using its own resources and normal lending channels.

Back to Top

6. What are some prohibited uses of an EIDL?

You may not use funds to pay cash dividends or bonuses, or for disbursements to owners, partners, officers or stockholders not directly related to the performance of services for the business. The SBA will not refinance long-term debts or provide working capital that was needed by the business prior to the disaster.

Back to Top

7. Is collateral required for an EIDL?

Generally a business must pledge collateral to the extent available. Occasionally, the SBA will make very small EIDLs on an unsecured basis. The SBA will not decline an EIDL request solely because available collateral will not adequately secure the loan, and a business will not be required to pledge more collateral than is necessary. The SBA may decline a loan if a business has collateral available but refuses to pledge it.

Back to Top

8. How long will I have to pay off the SBA loan?

The SBA will assess your financial situation and will set loan terms based on your needs and repayment ability. The maximum maturity for disaster loans is 30 years.

Back to Top

9. What kind of documentation should I use to show my losses?

In order for the SBA to compare your financial condition and operating results preceding the disaster with those during and since the disaster period, you must furnish balance sheets and operating statements for similar periods of time. The specific requirements are contained in the EIDL application form.

Back to Top

10. If I receive an EIDL, may I spend the loan money any way I want?

No. An EIDL is intended to help you maintain a secure financial condition until your business is back to normal. Your loan will be made for specific and designated purposes. Remember that the penalty for misusing disaster funds is immediate repayment of one-and-a-half times the original amount of the loan. The SBA requires that you keep receipts and good records of all loan expenditures for three years following receipt of your SBA loan.

Back to Top

11. May I expand my business facilities or purchase a new line of inventory with an EIDL?

No.

Back to Top

12. If I show the SBA that I am not making a profit, is that enough to qualify me for an EIDL?

No. Neither lack of profit or loss of anticipated sales alone is sufficient to establish substantial economic injury. Substantial economic injury occurs only when you cannot meet current obligations because of the disaster. Indicators of economic injury might be a larger than normal volume of receivables, a lower sales volume, slow inventory turnover, and the development of delinquencies in trade payables, current accruals and debt payments.

Back to Top

13. Are religious and nonprofit organizations eligible for an EIDL?

No. Only profit-oriented operating small businesses and small agricultural cooperatives may apply.

Back to Top

14. How soon will I know if I get the loan?

That depends on how soon you file a complete SBA loan application. We must calculate the amount of economic injury and the working capital and other needs of your business. We must be satisfied that you can repay the loan out of business operations, and we must take reasonable safeguards to help ensure the loan is repaid. The SBA loan application asks for the information we need. Since we process applications in the order received, the faster you can return it with all the needed information, the faster we can work on it. We try to make a decision on each application within 21 days. Be sure the information in your application is complete; missing information is the biggest cause of delay.

Back to Top

15. How soon can I expect the money?

Loans greater than $5,000 have to be secured. After we approve a request, we will tell you what documents are needed to close the loan. When we receive these documents, we can order the checks. You will receive the money in installments, as it is needed.

Back to Top

16. Is flood insurance needed to get a loan?

If the business is in a special flood hazard area, it must have flood insurance before we can disburse a loan. If the business was legally required to maintain flood insurance but did not, a disaster loan will not be made.

 

More about managing a disaster:

Disaster Management Introduction
Disaster Preparation
Disaster Loans

 

Information courtesy of the Small Business Administration.

 

Affiliated Websites

125aday
How-to books and business plans for starting a variety of businesses.

Adobe
Creative, video, audio, web design, and print publishing software.

Apple Business Store
Apple computer products - plus the latest accessories and software.

CafePress
Online marketplace of user-created products.

Dell Small Business
Dell computer solutions.

Entrepreneur.com
Business start-up and management guides for starting businesses.

FabJobs
Books, e-books, CDs and hundreds of career articles.

GoDaddy
Domain names, web hosting, website builders, and ecommerce solutions.

Logoworks
Professional corporate identity and logo design.

Microsoft Office Live Small Business
Online business applications.

Newegg.com
High-quality technology and entertainment products at great prices.

Nolo.com
Affordable, plain-English legal books, forms and software.

Palo Alto Software
Software tools for business, marketing, and legal planning. Over 500 sample plans.

QuickBooks
Small business accounting software.

 

 

 

© 2008 Small Business Notes. All rights reserved.