Alaska AIDEA Small Business Economic Development (SBED) Loan
Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority (AIDEA)
Up to $300,000
Long-term state loans for rural Alaska SMBs
The Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority (AIDEA) SBED loan program provides long-term, fixed-rate direct loans to Alaska small businesses in communities under 30,000 population. Loans of up to $750,000 can fund real estate, construction, equipment, and working capital. Majority owner must be an Alaska resident for at least one year, and applicants typically need a commercial bank turn-down letter. A gateway program for rural Alaska businesses unable to access conventional financing.
- Funding type
- Loan
- Level
- State
- Amount range
- $300,000
- Realistic amount
- Most SBED loans for small businesses range from $100,000–$500,000 for equipment, facility improvements, or working capit…
- Deadline
- Rolling — applications accepted year-round, subject to fund availability.
- Status
- active
- States
- AK
- Payment model
- advance
Who qualifies
- Business must be located in an Alaska community with a population under 30,000 (loans in larger communities available on a limited basis)
- Majority owner (51%+) must be an Alaska resident for at least one year prior to application
- Must qualify as a small business per SBA definitions
- Must provide a commercial bank 'turn-down letter' demonstrating inability to obtain conventional financing
- Minimum 10% co-investment from other sources required
- Business must create or retain employment in Alaska
- Loan amount may not exceed 90% of collateral value
Hard requirements
- Location restriction: Alaska community with population under 30,000
What it covers
Eligible expenses
- Acquisition of commercial real property
- New construction, rehabilitation, or expansion of facilities
- Acquisition of business equipment and machinery
- Working capital for business operations
- Other legitimate commercial purposes
Ineligible expenses
- Personal expenses
- Passive real estate investment or speculation
- Projects that do not create or retain Alaska employment
How to apply
-
1
Attempt conventional financing and obtain turn-down letter
Apply to one or more commercial banks. If declined, obtain a written turn-down letter explaining the denial. This is a required document for AIDEA's state loan programs and confirms that AIDEA is a lender of last resort.
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2
Contact AIDEA or Alaska Commerce Division of Investments
Contact the Alaska Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development, Division of Investments (commerce.alaska.gov/web/inv/) or AIDEA (aidea.org) to discuss your project and confirm the appropriate loan program.
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3
Prepare loan application package
Gather: 3 years of business and personal tax returns, business financial statements, business plan or project description, collateral documentation (property appraisal, equipment quotes), and bank turn-down letter.
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4
Submit application and undergo credit review
Submit the complete application to AIDEA or the Division of Investments. AIDEA conducts a credit and collateral review. Processing timelines vary by project complexity.
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5
Loan closing and disbursement
If approved, execute the loan agreement. Funds are disbursed per the approved project scope. Fixed asset loans are disbursed against verified expenditures; working capital loans may be lump-sum.
The bank turn-down letter is a hard requirement — approach at least one commercial bank first, even if you expect denial. Rural Alaska businesses in communities under 5,000 may qualify for additional AIDEA programs with different terms.
Deadline & timing
Applications are processed on a rolling basis. Contact AIDEA directly at aidea.org or call the Alaska Department of Commerce Division of Investments for current fund availability.
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Last reviewed 2026. GrantCompass is an independent funding-discovery tool and is not affiliated with any government agency. Always confirm details on the official program page.