Most SBA disaster loans let SBA pursue business assets; your personal assets usually stay outside the debt unless you signed a personal guarantee.
If you’ve got an Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) on your books, “non-recourse” can feel like the whole game. It’s the line between a business debt that stays in the business and a debt that can follow you home.
The catch is that EIDLs don’t fit into a single, one-size answer. The recourse question turns on your loan amount, your signed documents, and whether a personal guarantee applies. A lien on business assets is common, and that’s still “recourse” against the business, even when the owner is not personally on the hook.
This article shows you how to think about “non-recourse” in plain English, what rules tend to apply, and how to confirm your own situation by reading the right pages in your paperwork.
What “Non-Recourse” Means In Real Life
In lending, “recourse” is about who the lender can legally pursue for repayment when payments stop. With a recourse loan, the lender can chase the borrower beyond the collateral, up to the limits allowed by law and by the contract. With a non-recourse loan, the lender’s recovery is limited to agreed collateral and the borrowing entity itself.
For a typical small business, that leads to a simple, practical test:
- If the business can’t pay, can the lender pursue the owner personally? That usually depends on a personal guarantee.
- If the business has assets, can the lender claim them? That depends on collateral and lien terms.
So when people ask if these loans are non-recourse, they often mean “Can they come after me personally?” That’s a different question than “Can they seize business assets?” A loan can be non-recourse to owners while still letting the lender pursue business assets through a lien.
Are EIDL Loans Non-Recourse? What It Means For Your Personal Assets
In many cases, EIDL debt is not “non-recourse” in the pure sense, because SBA can still enforce repayment against the business and its assets. The personal-risk part comes down to whether you agreed to be responsible through a personal guarantee.
Here’s the clean way to frame it:
- No personal guarantee signed: SBA typically pursues the business borrower and business collateral, not the owner’s separate personal assets.
- Personal guarantee signed: SBA can pursue the guarantor under the guarantee terms if the borrower defaults.
COVID-era program changes created extra confusion. During that period, SBA was allowed to waive certain requirements tied to personal guarantees for smaller-dollar COVID EIDL loans, and SBA later resumed standard collection and servicing on delinquent accounts. If you’re trying to label your own loan as non-recourse, you still need to verify what your signed documents say, because the document controls your obligations.
How SBA Builds Repayment Rights On EIDL Debt
EIDLs sit inside SBA’s disaster loan programs. SBA publishes program descriptions and eligibility basics for EIDLs on its own site, including how the funds are intended to be used and how eligibility works. You can read SBA’s current overview on its official EIDL program page: SBA Economic Injury Disaster Loans page.
Separate from the public overview, your loan agreement and any security documents govern the lender’s legal tools. Most borrowers run into three building blocks:
Borrower liability
The borrower on an EIDL is the entity or individual that signed the note. If the borrower is a corporation, LLC, or partnership, the borrower is that entity. If the borrower is a sole proprietor, the borrower is the individual owner.
Collateral and liens
For many business loans, SBA can take a security interest in business assets. When a lender has a blanket lien on business property, it can claim certain assets as part of a collection process after default, subject to the agreement and applicable law.
Personal guarantees
A personal guarantee is a separate promise that an owner (or other person) will repay the debt if the borrower doesn’t. It’s the bridge that moves the risk from the business balance sheet to the individual.
Disaster loan rules live in federal regulations, and SBA’s disaster loan framework appears in Title 13 of the Code of Federal Regulations, Part 123. The current eCFR collection is here: 13 CFR Part 123 (Disaster Loan Program). Regulations set the baseline. Your signed loan documents set the details for your loan.
How To Tell If Your Specific EIDL Is Recourse Or Non-Recourse
You don’t need a legal dictionary to answer this for your own account. You need your signed documents and a steady, methodical read. Start with these steps:
- Identify the borrower name. Find the Promissory Note or Loan Authorization and locate the “Borrower” field. If it’s a sole proprietor, you’re usually the borrower as an individual.
- Search for “guaranty” language. Look for a separate guarantee form or guarantee section. If you signed a personal guarantee, your loan is not non-recourse to you.
- Look for collateral language. Check for a security agreement, lien language, or any UCC filing references. That shows SBA’s claim against business assets.
- Check owner thresholds and signatures. Many SBA programs tie guarantees to ownership levels, loan size, or both. Your signature blocks and addenda usually tell the story.
- Confirm any later modifications. If you accepted a loan increase, restructuring, or modification, re-check the updated documents, not only the first set.
Don’t rely on a screenshot from an email, a portal summary, or a third-party blog post. Your signed PDFs control what SBA can enforce.
COVID EIDL Personal Guarantee Waivers And What They Do Not Do
For COVID EIDL loans, SBA was permitted to waive rules tied to personal guarantees for advances and loans up to a stated threshold during the covered period. The Federal Register summary of SBA’s disaster loan program changes discusses that CARES Act authority and notes the waiver of rules related to personal guaranties on COVID EIDL loans of not more than $200,000 during the covered period: Federal Register: Disaster Loan Program Changes (2021).
That waiver can reduce personal exposure for many borrowers under that threshold. Still, it does not magically erase the borrower’s duty to repay. SBA can still pursue the borrower entity and, where collateral exists, enforce its security interests.
One more nuance: a waiver of a personal guarantee is not the same thing as “nobody can ever be pursued.” If there’s misuse of funds, fraud findings, or other grounds in the agreement, different remedies may apply. That’s one reason the “how you used funds” language in EIDL paperwork matters a lot.
So the practical takeaway is narrow and clear: a waived personal guarantee can make the loan feel “non-recourse” to owners, yet the debt can still be collected from the business borrower and business assets.
Table: Recourse Risk Map For Typical EIDL Setups
Use this as a high-level map, then verify your own loan terms in the signed documents. This table is about the direction of collection pressure, not about every procedural detail.
| Loan Feature Or Situation | What SBA Can Pursue | What To Check In Your Documents |
|---|---|---|
| Sole proprietor is the borrower | Owner as borrower, plus any pledged assets | Borrower name on the note; entity type; signature block |
| Business entity is the borrower, no guarantee signed | Borrower entity and business assets subject to lien | No personal guarantee form; collateral or security agreement terms |
| Personal guarantee signed by one or more owners | Borrower entity plus guarantor(s) under the guarantee | Guarantee form, guarantor names, guarantee scope |
| Loan includes a blanket lien on business assets | Business collateral covered by the security interest | Security agreement; UCC references; collateral description |
| Loan increase accepted after initial funding | Whatever the latest modification allows | Modification documents; updated signature pages |
| Delinquency with collateral and guarantors on file | Collection actions aimed at borrower and guarantors | Demand letters, servicing notices, guarantee enforcement language |
| Delinquency with no guarantee on file | Collection actions aimed at borrower and business assets | Borrower status; lien terms; servicing and default clauses |
| Use of proceeds outside permitted purposes | Contract remedies; potential referral pathways | Authorized use section; default triggers; certifications |
What Happens If An EIDL Goes Into Default
“Recourse” becomes real when payments stop and the account moves into delinquency and default processes. SBA uses a mix of outreach, servicing, and collection tools, and the presence of collateral and personal guarantors changes the collection path.
SBA’s Office of Inspector General has discussed SBA collection efforts on delinquent COVID EIDLs, including loans with collateral and personal guarantors. The official audit report is posted by SBA here: SBA OIG Report 25-23 (COVID EIDL collections).
From a borrower’s standpoint, the most useful mindset is this: default is not a single moment. It’s a sequence. Notices, demand letters, and escalation steps tend to follow a pattern. Your agreement usually defines default and lays out what SBA may do next, including acceleration clauses and enforcement of collateral rights.
Business assets can be part of the recovery
If your loan includes a security interest, SBA can seek recovery from covered business assets. That can affect equipment purchases, inventory, receivables, or other assets covered by the lien language in your documents.
Guarantors change the math
If a personal guarantee exists, SBA can pursue the guarantor consistent with the guarantee terms. That’s the clearest reason a guaranteed EIDL does not behave like a non-recourse deal for the owner.
Records matter
When borrowers try to sort out liability later, the cleanest answers come from the paper trail: signed agreements, modification letters, payment history, and correspondence. Save those PDFs in one place.
Table: Document Checklist To Confirm Non-Recourse Claims
This checklist is built for speed. The goal is to locate a yes-or-no answer without guessing.
| Document Or Section | What To Look For | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Promissory Note | Borrower name and entity type | Sets who owes the debt at the base level |
| Loan Authorization / Agreement | Default clause, use-of-funds rules | Defines triggers for enforcement actions |
| Personal Guarantee Form | Your name, signature, guarantee scope | Decides whether your personal assets are exposed |
| Security Agreement | Collateral description and lien coverage | Shows which business assets can be pursued |
| Modification / Increase Documents | Any new guarantee or collateral terms | Later changes can rewrite earlier assumptions |
| Servicing Notices | Delinquency status, cure demands | Shows where you are in the collection timeline |
| Ownership Records (internal) | Who owned what percentage when you signed | Helps explain why certain people were asked to sign |
Common Misreads That Lead To Bad Assumptions
“No collateral” means non-recourse
No. Collateral is about what property backs the loan. Recourse is about who can be pursued. A loan can be unsecured and still be recourse to the borrower. A loan can be secured and still be non-recourse to owners if no personal guarantee exists and the borrower is a separate entity.
“My portal didn’t show a guarantee” means none exists
Portal summaries can be incomplete. Your signed closing package is the safer source. If you ever signed a guarantee during an increase or modification, it may not be obvious from a dashboard view.
“My business is an LLC, so I’m automatically safe”
An LLC can limit liability in many contexts, yet a signed personal guarantee can bypass that separation. The contract is the switch.
Plain-English Wrap-Up You Can Act On
If you want a practical answer you can rely on, skip slogans like “recourse” and “non-recourse” until you’ve checked one thing: did you sign a personal guarantee?
If the answer is no and the borrower is a separate legal entity, SBA typically focuses collection on the borrower and any business collateral described in your documents. If the answer is yes, your personal exposure depends on what that guarantee says and what your state and federal rules allow in collection processes.
If you’re still unsure after reading your PDFs, the fastest move is to pull the note, the authorization/agreement, and any modification documents into one folder and search the text for “guaranty,” “security,” “collateral,” and “default.” You’ll usually find the answer in minutes once you’re reading the right pages.
References & Sources
- U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA).“Economic Injury Disaster Loans.”Official SBA overview of EIDL purpose, eligibility basics, and program context.
- Federal Register.“Disaster Loan Program Changes” (2021).Explains CARES Act authority tied to waiving personal guaranty rules for COVID EIDL loans up to a stated threshold.
- Electronic Code of Federal Regulations (eCFR).“13 CFR Part 123 — Disaster Loan Program.”Federal regulatory framework for SBA disaster loans, including EIDL categories and program rules.
- SBA Office of Inspector General (OIG).“Report 25-23: SBA’s Collection Efforts on Delinquent COVID-19 EIDLs.”Describes SBA collection approaches for delinquent COVID EIDL accounts, including cases with collateral and personal guarantors.
