Community Impact
Expanding Opportunity Where It Is Needed Most
Apply for FundingOnCo focuses where the gap is widest: communities where generations of entrepreneurs have been underserved not because their businesses weren’t good enough, but because the financing system wasn’t built for them. Nonprofit, CDFI-certified lending exists precisely to change that and OnCo is bringing it to the Southeast…and beyond.
Our programs prioritize entrepreneurs who are:
- First-generation business owners
- Located in low-to-moderate income communities
- Fall within a specific geographic footprint
- Underserved by traditional lenders
Through responsible lending and business education, OnCo helps entrepreneurs create lasting economic opportunity.
Where We Work
Active lending
New York
Over 1,400 bank branches closed nationally in 2023. New York neighborhoods feel that impact.
Apply for funding in New York
Active lending
Michigan
Detroit has some of the highest concentrations of banking deserts among major U.S. cities.
Apply for funding in Michigan
Active lending
Indiana
Indianapolis census tracts include designated banking deserts with no branch within 2 miles.
Apply for funding in Indiana
Active lending
Virginia
Virginia’s rural communities have fewer bank branches per person than the national average.
Apply for funding in Virginia
Active lending
Kentucky
Kentucky’s Appalachian counties rank among the most persistent poverty regions in the U.S.
Apply for funding in Kentucky
Open for borrowers
New Mexico
New Mexico has some of the highest concentrations of rural persistent poverty counties in the West.
Apply now
Focus state
Arkansas
Over 40% of Arkansas rural counties lost bank branches between 2012 and 2017.
Apply today
Focus state
Louisiana
Louisiana has the 2nd-highest unbanked rate in the nation, at 8.1% — triple the national average.
Apply today
Focus state
Mississippi
Mississippi has the highest unbanked rate in the country, at 11.1% — nearly 3x the national rate.
Apply today
Focus state
Alabama
1 in 9 Alabama households is unbanked, one of the highest rates in the U.S.
Apply today
Focus state
Georgia
In rural Georgia, the unbanked rate is nearly double the rate in metro Atlanta.
Focus state
Florida
FL has 2.6M+ small businesses, yet CDFIs approve 88% of applicants vs. 66% for large banks.
Apply today
Focus state
North Carolina
NC’s rural Black communities face mortgage denial rates more than double those in metro areas.
Apply today
Focus state
Tennessee
23%+ of Tennesseans live in rural counties, nearly double the national average of 14%.
Apply today
Focus state
West Virginia
WV has the highest share of persistently poor rural counties of any state east of the Mississippi.
Apply today
Active lending
Alaska
Rural Alaska has the fewest bank branches per capita of any U.S. state.
Active lending
Arizona
Hispanic-owned AZ businesses face loan denial rates nearly double those of white-owned firms.
Active lending
California
CA has the most CDFIs of any state yet $150B in unmet small business credit need persists nationally.
Active lending
Colorado
Rural Colorado small businesses are 10x more likely to be in a banking desert than urban ones.
Active lending
Connecticut
1 in 5 Black small business owners nationally didn’t apply for loans fearing rejection.
Active lending
Delaware
Small businesses generate 44% of U.S. GDP but only 42% have their financing needs fully met.
Active lending
Hawaii
Native Hawaiian-owned businesses have among the lowest SBA loan approval rates in the nation.
Active lending
Idaho
Rural Idaho towns losing bank branches face documented drops in small business lending.
Active lending
Illinois
Chicago’s South Side has some of the highest banking desert rates of any major U.S. city.
Active lending
Iowa
Rural Iowa has seen 40%+ of counties lose bank branches, farms and small firms bear the brunt.
Active lending
Kansas
85% of persistently poor U.S. counties are rural. Kansas communities feel the lending gap daily.
Active lending
Maine
Rural Maine businesses are 10x more likely than urban ones to be located in a banking desert.
Active lending
Maryland
Black business owners nationally are denied loans at nearly 3x the rate of white-owned businesses.
Active lending
Massachusetts
Mission-driven lenders approve 88% of applicants vs. just 15% full approval at big banks.
Active lending
Minnesota
Native American-owned businesses receive the smallest share of SBA funding of any demographic group.
Active lending
Missouri
Rural MO counties losing branches face documented declines in small business loan originations.
Active lending
Montana
Native-owned businesses in rural Montana are among the least served by traditional banks in the U.S.
Active lending
Nebraska
In rural Nebraska, 40%+ of counties lost bank branches over one recent five-year span.
Active lending
Nevada
Hispanic business owners face loan denials at nearly double the rate of white business owners.
Active lending
New Hampshire
New England rural towns have broadband gaps that compound banking desert challenges.
Active lending
New Jersey
Only 47% of Black-owned businesses nationally receive full loan amounts vs. 61% for white-owned.
Active lending
North Dakota
Rural ND counties depend heavily on physical banks but closures have accelerated since 2019.
Active lending
Ohio
Ohio’s Appalachian counties are among the most persistent poverty regions in the entire country.
Active lending
Oklahoma
Native American-owned businesses receive less than 1% of national SBA loan dollars.
Active lending
Oregon
Rural Oregon towns face broadband gaps and branch closures, a double hit on capital access.
Active lending
Pennsylvania
PA’s rural banking deserts have expanded significantly since 2019 across the Appalachian corridor.
Active lending
Rhode Island
Minority-owned small businesses carry higher debt costs and lower approval rates across the U.S.
Active lending
South Dakota
Native-owned businesses on SD reservations face some of the worst bank access gaps in the U.S.
Active lending
Texas
TX has the 2nd-largest concentration of Hispanic-owned businesses yet loan denial rates remain high.
Active lending
Utah
Despite SBA growth, rural Utah businesses still face a $150B annual unmet credit gap nationally.
Active lending
Vermont
VT rural businesses rank among the most dependent on physical banking — and branches keep closing.
Active lending
Washington
Tribal-owned businesses in WA receive less than 1% of all national SBA loan approvals.
Active lending
Wisconsin
Rural WI counties saw bank branch declines accelerate during and after the COVID-19 pandemic.
Active lending
Wyoming
Wyoming has some of the fewest bank branches per capita of any inland U.S. state.
District of Columbia
-
OnCo Headquarters(Charleston, South Carolina)
-
Focus States(Priority funding regions & high-impact areas)
-
OnCo Eligible(OnCo lends nationwide. Loans not available for businesses based in: MT, ND, SD, or VT.)
Map highlighting:
-
Southeastern United States
-
U.S.
-
IndianaOnCo loan eligibility is mapped against the FFIEC CIMS tool to confirm CDFI eligibility at the census tract level.
Headquarters: Charleston, SC.
Impact Goals
Guided by our core values, OnCo seeks the following impact:
Track our Impact
- Expand access to responsible capital.
- Strengthen small business capacity.
- Create and retain jobs.
- Promote generational wealth and economic mobility.
Impact Measurement
OnCo tracks:
Regular reporting ensures our utmost transparency and accountability.
- loan deployment
- Borrower demographics
- Job creation
- Revenue growth.
$1 federal dollar → $8 in community investment
For every $1 the federal government invests in CDFIs, at least $8 in private capital follows into underserved communities.
Source:
CDFI Fund
88% approval. Not 15%
CDFIs approve 88% of loan applicants. Large banks fully approve just 15%. Same entrepreneurs. Different lender.
Source:
Federal Reserve Small Business Credit Survey
$135 billion into communities banks left behind.
CDFI-connected investments leveraged more than $135 billion in capital into high-poverty, high-unemployment communities.
Source:
CDFI Fund / NMTC Coalition
Borrowers save $2,700 per loan.
On average, CDFI borrowers save more than $2,700 per loan compared to market-rate alternatives, including high-cost online lenders.
Source:
Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
One loan. Generational change.
Small business ownership is the most proven pathway to generational wealth, especially for families who've never had it.
Source:
U.S. Treasury / Federal Reserve
A loan that builds your credit score.
CDFI borrowers, especially those starting with the lowest scores, see their personal credit improve in the years after their loan.
Source:
Urban Institute