Women-owned businesses have access to every major financing option—plus certifications and programs built to support them. Here's what's available, what actually helps, and how to get funded.
Here's the honest picture: there's no separate loan product reserved only for women, and by law lenders can't base approval on gender. What does exist is the full range of standard business financing—plus a set of programs, certifications, and resources that genuinely help women-owned businesses qualify and grow. So the real question isn't "is there a women's loan," it's "which financing fits my business, and which programs give me an edge."
You can access every product on the market. Match the type to your need:
| Option | Best for | Speed |
|---|---|---|
| SBA loans | Lowest rates, long terms, growth | 30-60+ days |
| Working capital | Payroll, inventory, cash flow | 1-3 days |
| Line of credit | Flexible, ongoing access | 1-7 days |
| Term loan | A defined project or expansion | 1-7 days |
| Equipment financing | Buying equipment or vehicles | 1-7 days |
| Revenue-based financing | Strong sales, flexible repayment | 1-5 days |
These don't replace a loan—they strengthen your position and open doors:
The federal Women-Owned Small Business certification helps you compete for set-aside government contracts—revenue that makes financing easier to land.
SBA 7(a), Express, and microloans are widely used by women-owned businesses for low rates and long terms.
The SBA-backed WBC network offers free counseling, training, and help preparing a strong loan application.
Community Development Financial Institutions and nonprofit lenders often focus on women and underserved founders.
Government, corporate, and nonprofit grants exist—competitive and limited, but they don't need repayment.
Many corporations seek women-owned suppliers; certification can win contracts that fuel growth.
Qualification is about your business, not your gender. Most lenders look for:
Decide what you need the funds for and which product fits—SBA, working capital, line of credit, or more.
Have bank statements and basic financials ready; add WOSB certification if you have it.
One application reaches multiple lenders so you can compare real offers.
Choose the best terms and get funded—short-term options often in 1-3 business days.
There's no separate loan reserved only for women, and lenders can't approve based on gender. What exists is the full range of standard financing plus supportive programs—SBA lending, the Women's Business Centers network, and CDFIs that focus on women entrepreneurs.
WOSB (Women-Owned Small Business) certification helps you compete for set-aside government contracts. It doesn't directly grant a loan, but the contracts it unlocks strengthen your revenue and make financing easier to qualify for.
All of them—SBA loans, working capital, lines of credit, term loans, equipment financing, and more. The choice depends on your business, not gender.
Yes—from government, corporate, and nonprofit sources—but they're competitive, limited, and separate from loans. Most owners combine financing with grants pursued in parallel.
On your business: revenue, time in business, credit, and cash flow. Strong deposits and organized documentation matter most. Apply to see your options.
Whatever stage you're at, we'll match you with lenders that fit your business—one application, multiple options, and guidance through to funding.