A personal FICO of 700–749 sits in the prime tier — conventional bank term loans are fully accessible, SBA 7(a) approvals are straightforward, and the full product stack (term loans, lines of credit, SBA 504, equipment financing) opens without the overlays that constrain near-prime applicants. At this band, business fundamentals like DSCR, revenue trend, and collateral determine structure and pricing, not credit eligibility.
The 700–749 FICO band is prime credit — the threshold at which most conventional bank lenders, SBA Preferred Lender Program (PLP) participants, and credit unions clear their internal overlays and move directly into full underwriting. Below 700, lenders frequently apply manual review requirements, higher DSCR minimums, or additional collateral conditions. At 700+, those friction layers largely disappear: FICO SBSS composite scoring clears 155+ at most SBA PLP lenders with minimal business credit augmentation, conventional bank term loans at 7%–10% become the standard product, and the SBA 504 program — which requires stronger credit profiles — is broadly accessible. SBA 7(a) program guidelines confirm that FICO SBSS composite scoring, which blends personal credit, business credit bureau data, and financial profile metrics, regularly clears lender thresholds at 700+ FICO when DSCR is at or above 1.25. CFPB small business lending research documents that at prime credit, application-to-approval conversion rates increase materially versus near-prime bands. ECOA prohibits denials based on protected characteristics; every complete application receives full underwriting review regardless of credit tier.
Five financing categories are fully accessible at 700–749 FICO: (1) Conventional bank term loans — the primary cost-competitive product unlocked at 700+. Rates of 7%–10% APR for qualified borrowers; 3–5 year terms for equipment and working capital; 10–20 year terms for real estate; collateral strengthens terms but is no longer a substitute for credit score. (2) SBA 7(a) standard — the government-backed path to up to $5 million at WSJ Prime + 2.75% maximum. At 700–749 FICO, SBA PLP lenders can process applications on delegated authority — faster approval than standard-processing programs. (3) SBA 504 — for commercial real estate and major equipment acquisition. 504 requires stronger credit and a demonstrated equity injection; 700+ FICO is a standard lender overlay. (4) Business lines of credit at bank tier — revolving facilities at 620+ are possible, but 700+ opens prime-rate revolvers from community banks and regional banks at competitive pricing. (5) Equipment financing — at 700–749 FICO, the equipment itself is usually sufficient collateral without additional personal guarantee augmentation; lenders compete for well-qualified borrowers. The Federal Reserve 2024 Small Business Credit Survey found that prime borrowers at community banks and regional banks had approval rates substantially above the all-borrower average — confirming the product breadth accessible at 700+.
At 700–749 FICO, business fundamentals are the primary qualification lever: DSCR — lenders calculate net operating income against total proposed debt service; 1.25x is the SBA floor, and conventional banks typically require 1.25x–1.35x on conventional term loans; strong DSCR (1.5x+) at this FICO band often produces rate discounts. Time in business — conventional bank term loans typically require 2–3 years; SBA 7(a) standard also generally requires 2 years of operating history; community banks may require 3+ years for best pricing. Revenue and revenue trend — consistent or growing revenue over 2–3 tax years is a strong approval signal; declining revenue with a FICO of 720 is still a risk signal to underwriters. Collateral — at 700–749 FICO, SBA lenders collateralize to the extent practical but insufficient collateral is not a standalone disqualifier for SBA-backed loans; conventional bank term loans typically require specific collateral (real estate, equipment, accounts receivable pledge). Tax compliance — no unresolved federal or state tax liens; SBA requires 4506-C transcript; commercial banks do the same on business tax returns. Business credit bureau — a Paydex of 70+ and an active Experian Business profile strengthen SBSS even at 700+ personal FICO, enabling faster delegated-authority processing. ECOA requires that all factors be evaluated together; no single threshold is disqualifying in isolation.
The full SBA product stack is accessible at 700–749: (1) SBA 7(a) standard — up to $5 million at WSJ Prime + 2.75% maximum, terms up to 25 years for real estate. PLP lenders process on delegated authority at this FICO band, reducing turnaround to 7–14 days in many cases. (2) SBA 7(a) Express — up to $500,000, 36-hour SBA response, same rate maximums. At 700–749 FICO, Express is frequently the fastest SBA path for amounts under $500K. (3) SBA 504 — for commercial real estate and heavy equipment. 504 structures split the loan between a Certified Development Company (CDC, 40%), a bank (50%), and an equity injection (10%+). The long-term fixed-rate CDC portion carries below-market rates published by SBA monthly; 700+ FICO is the practical entry point for most 504 lenders. (4) SBA CAPLines — revolving or seasonal working capital lines under the 7(a) umbrella; particularly useful for seasonal businesses or those with cyclical receivables. At 700–749 FICO, conventional bank term loans at 7%–10% can compete with SBA 7(a) on effective cost for borrowers who don’t need the full $5M ceiling or the SBA collateral flexibility.
The rate gap between 700–749 (prime) and 650–699 (near-prime) is larger than the gap between 700–749 and 750+ (super-prime). Indicative ranges: SBA 7(a) at 700–749 FICO: WSJ Prime + 2.25%–2.75% — approximately 10.5%–13% at current prime. SBA rate maximums apply equally across all FICO tiers above lender floors; the practical rate difference between 700 and 760 FICO on SBA 7(a) is modest (0–50 basis points in lender-negotiated spread). Conventional bank term loans at 700–749 FICO: 7%–10% APR, depending on collateral, DSCR, and bank relationship. At 750+ FICO, conventional bank term loans often come down to 6%–8% for the strongest profiles. CDFI term loans: 8%–12% APR — at 700–749, CDFIs may not offer material pricing advantage over conventional bank products and are better positioned for underserved borrowers. Online term loans at 700–749 FICO: 10%–18% APR for 12–36 month products — a meaningful improvement over near-prime but still significantly above bank-tier rates. The Federal Reserve 2024 Small Business Credit Survey found prime borrowers at large banks averaged 6%–8% on conventional term loans — the benchmark prime borrowers approach as FICO moves toward 750+.
Maintaining 700+ FICO during and after a business loan application matters because lenders often re-pull credit at closing and covenant compliance checks may include credit monitoring triggers on SBA-backed facilities. The highest risks for FICO regression at this band: (1) New credit applications — each hard inquiry can lower FICO by 5–10 points temporarily; rate-shopping multiple lenders within a 14–45 day window is treated as a single inquiry under FICO scoring methodology. (2) Increased revolving utilization — using personal credit cards for business expenses during the application period can temporarily spike utilization and suppress FICO. (3) Missed payment on any tradeline — a single 30-day late payment can move a 720 FICO to sub-700 in one reporting cycle. (4) Business credit deterioration — Paydex drops or new adverse business bureau entries can lower SBSS even when personal FICO holds. The CFPB credit score resources provide the authoritative five-factor FICO framework: payment history (35%), utilization (30%), length of history (15%), credit mix (10%), new inquiries (10%). The highest-leverage protective action: keep revolving utilization below 20% aggregate and avoid new credit applications for 60–120 days around the business loan application.