apply-stand-up-india-loan-2026
Translate:

How to apply for Stand-Up India loan — complete 2026 guide

How to apply for Stand-Up India loan 2026 — RTI Wiki citizen guide

⚠️ DPDP Rules, 2025 (14 Nov 2025) amended Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act — public-interest override now under Section 8(2). Read the note →

· 2026/04/19 05:02

Quick answer. Stand-Up India is a Government of India scheme launched on 5 April 2016 (extended up to 2025-26 in Budget 2022 and continuing in 2026) that requires every scheduled commercial bank branch to fund at least one Scheduled Caste (SC) or Scheduled Tribe (ST) borrower and one woman borrower for a greenfield enterprise. Loan size: ₹10 lakh to ₹1 crore, composite (term + working capital). Margin: borrower's contribution ideally 10%, max 25%. Rate: Bank's MCLR + 3% + Tenor Premium (max). Tenure: up to 7 years with moratorium of up to 18 months. Apply free at https://www.standupmitra.in or directly at any PSU/private/foreign/RRB branch. The portal also gives you a handholding agency (DIC, KVIC, SIDBI offices) to help with project report, GST, Udyam etc.

Sunita's story — "₹15 lakh bakery loan that took 9 months to land"

Sunita Kamble, 34, Dalit woman entrepreneur from Indore. Worked in a hotel bakery for 11 years. In April 2025 decided to set up her own unit — “Sunita's Crust”, a 600 sq ft bakery + 4-table cafe in Vijay Nagar. Project cost ₹19 lakh: ₹4 lakh own contribution, ₹15 lakh loan asked under Stand-Up India.

“I registered on standupmitra.in in May 2025. The portal allotted me to a PSU bank branch in Vijay Nagar and a handholding agency — DIC Indore. The DIC officer was excellent — helped me make the project report, get my Udyam, FSSAI, GST done. By July 2025 my full file was at the bank branch. Then nothing. Manager kept saying 'collateral chahiye'. I told him Stand-Up India loans up to my limit are CGTMSE-covered. He said 'pata hai, par head office se sanction lena padega'. Three months passed. I asked twice in writing — got 'under process' both times. In October I sent an RTI by Speed Post to the PIO at the bank's Indore Zonal Office — total cost ₹10 IPO + ₹52 Speed Post. Reply came on 18 November (29 days). They wrote: 'Application No. SUI-2025-MP-IND-7412 received on 12.07.2025. Pending — collateral waiver under CGTMSE not initiated by branch. Branch advised on 21.10.2025 to process under Stand-Up India CGTMSE cover. Sanction expected within 30 days.' Sanction letter came on 9 December. First disbursement on 22 December. The RTI cost me ₹62. The local 'consultant' who came to my shop had quoted ₹35,000 to 'follow up'. My bakery opened on 14 February 2026.”

—Sunita, March 2026

As of December 2025, Stand-Up India had cumulatively sanctioned ₹54,200 crore to about 2.41 lakh beneficiaries — of which ~80% are women and ~20% SC/ST (Ministry of Finance dashboard data, January 2026). Industry estimates suggest about 30% of fully eligible applications silently lapse in the branch-to-zonal sanction loop without ever being formally rejected — exactly the bucket Sunita's RTI cracked open.

What Stand-Up India is — and who can apply

The Stand-Up India scheme is a credit-linked subsidy / facilitation scheme run by the Department of Financial Services, Ministry of Finance, with SIDBI as the operating agency at the national level. The legal anchor is the scheme guidelines notified on 6 April 2016 and extended via Budget speeches; the loan itself is governed by the RBI Master Directions on Priority Sector Lending and the Banking Regulation Act 1949.

You can apply if all are true:

  • You are an SC or ST or Woman (each entrepreneur category counted separately at branch level).
  • You are 18 years or above.
  • The enterprise is a greenfield project — i.e., your first venture in Manufacturing, Services, Trading or Agri-allied activities (allowed since 2021 — agro-processing, dairy, poultry, fishery, beekeeping etc.).
  • For non-individual entities (private limited / partnership / LLP), at least 51% shareholding and controlling stake must rest with the SC/ST/Woman promoter.
  • You are not a defaulter to any bank or financial institution.

The loan is for setting up a new enterprise — not for taking over an existing business, refinancing, or buying a running shop.

Step-by-step process

Step 1 — Build your project idea + ballpark numbers

Stand-Up India is not a “give me money first, idea later” scheme. Banks reject vague proposals fast. Before you touch the portal, write down:

  • What you will make / sell / serve.
  • Where (rented or owned premises — any address proof).
  • Plant & machinery cost; furniture cost; working capital for first 3 months (raw material, salaries, electricity, rent).
  • Expected monthly sales by month 6 and month 12.
  • Your own contribution — bank statement showing the funds (10% to 25% of project cost).

If you have no idea where to start, walk into your District Industries Centre (DIC) or nearest MSME-DI office for a free counselling session.

Step 2 — Register on standupmitra.in

Go to https://www.standupmitra.in. Click “Register”. You will be taken through three branches — “Trainee Borrower” (need lots of help), “Ready Borrower” (project report ready, just need bank), or “Other Information Seeker” (browsing).

For most first-time applicants, choose Trainee Borrower. The portal will ask:

  • Name, mobile, email, Aadhaar, category (SC/ST/Woman), state, district.
  • Activity — Manufacturing / Services / Trading / Agri-allied.
  • Loan amount required.
  • Whether you have premises / project report / Udyam / GST.

Step 3 — Get your handholding agency

After registration, the portal allots you a handholding agency based on the gaps you flagged:

  • District Industries Centre (DIC) — primary state-level agency for MSME entrepreneurs.
  • KVIC / KVIB district office — if your activity is village-industry related.
  • NABARD / DDM office — for agri-allied projects.
  • NSIC, MSME-DI, Mudra Mitra, Lead District Manager (LDM) of the bank.
  • NGOs and incubators empanelled with SIDBI.

The agency will help you with: project report, GST registration, Udyam registration, FSSAI / pollution / shop & establishment licences, machinery quotations and even a soft credit history briefing. All handholding services are free — pay nothing to anyone for these.

Step 4 — Get Udyam, GST, PAN and other statutory registrations

For loan sanction the bank will ask for:

  • Udyam Registration Certificate (free at https://udyamregistration.gov.in — see our Udyam guide).
  • GST Registration (mandatory if turnover > ₹20 lakh services / ₹40 lakh goods, or for inter-state supply — but most banks now insist on GST regardless).
  • PAN (individual / firm / company).
  • Shop & Establishment / Trade Licence from local municipal corporation.
  • Activity-specific licences — FSSAI for food, Drug Licence for pharma, Pollution NOC for any “red/orange” category unit.

Step 5 — Prepare a bankable project report

A good project report is the make-or-break document. It typically has:

  • Executive summary (1 page).
  • Promoter background, education, experience.
  • Product / service description and target market.
  • Plant / equipment list with vendor quotations.
  • Financial projections — sales, costs, profit, cash flow for 3-5 years.
  • Break-even analysis.
  • Means of finance — own contribution, term loan, working capital.
  • Repayment schedule.

Templates are downloadable on standupmitra.in under “Library” → “Sample Project Reports”. DIC and MSME-DI also help draft them free.

Step 6 — Apply through standupmitra.in OR direct branch

Online: After your handholding is complete and project report is ready, click “Apply for Loan” → choose 3 nearest bank branches → submit. The portal forwards your application electronically.

Offline: Walk into any bank branch with the project report. Insist that they note it in the “Stand-Up India” register (RBI mandate — every branch must maintain one).

The bank will ask for:

  • Identity / address proof.
  • Caste certificate (for SC/ST applicants).
  • Project report.
  • Quotations for machinery / vehicles.
  • Premises proof (rent agreement / sale deed).
  • Bank statements (last 6 months).
  • Income proof of co-applicant (if any).

Step 7 — Sanction, CGTMSE and disbursement

Per scheme guidelines, the bank should sanction or reject within 15 days of receiving a complete file. In practice this often slips to 60-90 days.

Loans up to ₹10 lakh under Stand-Up India are fully covered under CGTMSE (Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises) — meaning no third-party collateral. Loans above ₹10 lakh up to ₹1 crore can also be CGTMSE-covered subject to bank's risk policy. You should not be asked for personal collateral or third-party guarantee for the CGTMSE-covered portion — this is the most common point where branches stall (Sunita's case).

After sanction:

  • Term loan for fixed assets — disbursed in tranches against utilisation evidence (machinery purchase invoice, payment proof).
  • Working capital — usually a Cash Credit / Overdraft limit operationalised as you start trading.
  • Stand-Up India RuPay debit card — for the working capital limit.
  • Repayment — equated monthly instalments after the moratorium (up to 18 months).

Step 8 — Use, report, and grow

  • File GST returns monthly / quarterly.
  • Submit stock statements to the bank monthly (for working capital limits ≥ ₹1 crore — for smaller limits, quarterly).
  • Maintain basic books (cash book, sales register, purchase register) — also makes annual ITR filing painless.
  • Build a credit history — first CIBIL Commercial rating typically appears in 18 months.

Sample loan size + margin + interest table

+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
| Eligible borrowers           | SC / ST / Woman, 18+, first-time entre-     |
|                              | preneur in Manufacturing / Services /       |
|                              | Trading / Agri-allied.                      |
+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
| Loan amount                  | Rs 10 lakh to Rs 1 crore (composite —       |
|                              | term loan + working capital).               |
+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
| Bank's lending obligation    | At least 75% of project cost                |
|                              | (so own contribution: 25% maximum).         |
|                              | Best-effort: own contribution 10% +         |
|                              | convergence with Central/State subsidy.     |
+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
| Interest rate                | Bank's MCLR + 3% + Tenor Premium (cap).     |
|                              | Negotiable — push for lowest in your slab.  |
+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
| Tenure                       | Up to 7 years incl. moratorium 18 months    |
|                              | maximum.                                    |
+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
| Collateral / guarantee       | Loans up to Rs 10 lakh: 100% CGTMSE cover.  |
|                              | Above 10 L to 1 cr: CGTMSE optional, often  |
|                              | covered subject to bank credit policy.      |
+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
| Processing fee               | Per bank's standard MSME schedule           |
|                              | (typically 0.5%-1% of sanctioned amount).   |
|                              | Many banks waive for women / SC/ST.         |
+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
| Stand-Up India RuPay card    | Issued for working capital limit.           |
+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
| Sanction SLA                 | 15 days (scheme); 60-90 days (real life).   |
+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
| Application fee on portal    | NIL.                                        |
+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
| RTI for stalled application  | Rs 10 by IPO. BPL = free.                   |
+------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+

Common reasons your Stand-Up India file gets stuck

  • Branch insists on collateral despite CGTMSE being available — exactly Sunita's case. Quote the RBI Master Direction on Priority Sector + scheme guidelines (collateral-free up to ₹10 lakh) in writing.
  • “Project not bankable” verbal feedback without written reasons. Insist on a written rejection — this lets you escalate.
  • CIBIL score / past dues — even an old credit-card overdue of ₹1,500 can flag as default. Pull your CIBIL report (free once a year) and clear before applying.
  • Premises documents not in your name — rent agreement on landlord's old address, no latest electricity bill. Update before applying.
  • Promoter's contribution not visible in bank statement — banks want to see your 10-25% own funds parked for at least 90 days.
  • Wrong activity classification — applying as “Trading” when scheme prefers Manufacturing/Services; or claiming agri-allied when your project is pure trading.
  • Lack of caste certificate validity — old certificate from another state, or expired. Get fresh one from SDM/Tehsildar.
  • Branch sends file to Zonal Office but no follow-up — exactly the gap RTI fills (your file is there, just queued).
  • Multiple greenfield issue — promoter's spouse / father runs the same business; banks treat this as not greenfield.
  • No handholding flag — when the application has no DIC/MSME endorsement, branch doubts the bona fide.

If stuck — the escalation ladder

Rung 1 — Branch Manager (in writing)

  • Submit a written grievance with acknowledgement number + dates.
  • Ask for a written rejection if they intend to reject — verbal rejection has no escalation value.
  • Best for: routine status, document gaps, premium / margin clarifications.

Rung 2 — Lead District Manager (LDM)

  • Each district has an LDM — usually a senior officer of the lead bank (often SBI, PNB, BoB or Canara Bank depending on the district).
  • Find LDM contact at https://www.standupmitra.in → “Handholding Agency” → enter district → LDM card.
  • The LDM convenes the District Consultative Committee (DCC) monthly — Stand-Up India is a standing agenda item.
  • A polite written escalation often unlocks files within 2-3 weeks.

Rung 3 — State Level Bankers' Committee (SLBC)

  • SLBC convenor (a major bank in your state) tracks Stand-Up India coverage state-wide and reports to RBI / DFS quarterly.
  • Send your representation to the SLBC Convenor's office + cc to DFS Stand-Up Cell.
  • SLBC pressure on a non-performing branch is significant.

Rung 4 — CPGRAMS + Banking Ombudsman

  • CPGRAMS: https://pgportal.gov.in → Ministry “Department of Financial Services” → “Stand-Up India / MSME Lending”.
  • RBI's Integrated Ombudsman Scheme 2021 — file at https://cms.rbi.org.in for deficiency in service / inordinate delay. Free, online, decision binding (up to ₹20 lakh + ₹1 lakh for inconvenience).

Rung 5 — Right to Information (RTI)

All Public Sector Banks are public authorities under §2(h) of the RTI Act 2005. Private banks, when they administer government schemes (including Stand-Up India), have been held answerable for the scheme-specific information by several CIC orders.

RTI helps here when:

  • Your application has been at the branch / zonal office for 60+ days without sanction or written rejection — RTI to PIO at the bank's Zonal / Circle Office for application status, file movement notings, and pending action item (Sunita's case).
  • The branch claims “head office / zonal sanction pending” — RTI to PIO at Head Office Priority Sector Department for the actual queue position and reason.
  • You were rejected without written reasons — RTI for the internal credit appraisal note and the regret letter copy.
  • You suspect the branch is not maintaining the mandatory Stand-Up India register — RTI for branch register copy for the year (this often unsettles non-compliant branches).
  • Your CGTMSE cover was applied for but is lying with CGTMSE Trust — RTI to PIO of CGTMSE, Mumbai for application status under your SUI reference.

See: RTI in 12 simple steps and write the application yourself — no need to hire anyone.

RTI does NOT help here when:

  • Your CIBIL score is below the bank's cut-off — RTI cannot fix your credit history. Repair CIBIL first.
  • You don't have a basic project report — RTI cannot generate documents. Use DIC / MSME-DI handholding free.
  • You want the bank to lower interest rate — that's a commercial decision under MCLR pricing. Negotiate directly or shop with another bank.
  • You want a loan above ₹1 crore or for a non-greenfield enterprise — Stand-Up India does not cover it. Look at MUDRA Tarun (up to ₹20 lakh, expansion allowed in 2026), SIDBI MSME loans, or PSB loans-in-59-minutes portal.
  • You want legal damages for delay — that needs a Banking Ombudsman award or Consumer Forum complaint. RTI gets you the documents; the remedy is elsewhere.

FAQs

Q. I am OBC — am I eligible for Stand-Up India?
No. Stand-Up India is restricted to SC, ST and Woman categories. OBC applicants can apply under PMEGP (subsidy 15-35%), MUDRA (up to ₹20 lakh), or NSIC schemes — see our PMEGP guide.

Q. Can a husband-wife duo (with wife as 51% promoter) apply if husband already runs a similar business?
Technically yes — the Woman is the 51%+ promoter and the enterprise must be greenfield. But the bank will scrutinise sharply for “benami” greenfield. Best to apply for an entirely different activity / location.

Q. Can I use the loan to buy a vehicle for delivery?
Yes, if the vehicle is part of the project's fixed assets (e.g., a refrigerated van for a dairy unit). Pure car / two-wheeler loans without business use are not covered.

Q. Do I need to repay the loan if my business fails?
Yes — Stand-Up India is a loan, not a grant. CGTMSE protects the bank, not you personally. If genuinely unable to repay, approach the bank for a one-time settlement (OTS) under their NPA policy, or restructuring.

Q. Can I apply for Stand-Up India and PMEGP together for the same project?
No — these are alternative routes. PMEGP gives you a 15-35% margin money subsidy (back-end); Stand-Up India does not give a subsidy but assures collateral-free credit. Choose based on what matters more: subsidy vs. collateral comfort.

Q. The bank insists on my husband / father as guarantor even though I'm a woman applicant. Is this valid?
For loans up to ₹10 lakh under CGTMSE — no third-party guarantee needed. RBI has reiterated this in multiple master directions. Insist in writing; escalate to Banking Ombudsman if ignored.

Q. How long is sanction valid? And what if I delay disbursement?
Sanction letters are usually valid for 6 months. If you don't drawdown within 6 months, revalidation may be required (usually free). Don't sign sanction terms without reading the disbursement schedule.

Share this article
Was this helpful? views
apply-stand-up-india-loan-2026.txt · Last modified: by 127.0.0.1

Except where otherwise noted, content on this wiki is licensed under the following license: GNU Free Documentation License 1.3
GNU Free Documentation License 1.3 Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki