What Happened
- The Reserve Bank of India announced that the collateral-free loan limit for micro and small enterprises (MSEs) will be doubled from Rs. 10 lakh to Rs. 20 lakh under the Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises (CGTMSE) scheme.
- The enhanced limit applies to all loans sanctioned or renewed on or after April 1, 2026.
- Banks may further extend the collateral-free limit to up to Rs. 25 lakh for MSE units with a good track record and sound financial position, based on their internal policies.
- The previous limit of Rs. 10 lakh had been unchanged since 2010, when it was itself revised upward from Rs. 5 lakh.
- The move aligns with the Union Budget 2026-27's MSME-focused package, which included a Rs. 10,000 crore SME Growth Fund and additional risk capital support measures.
Static Topic Bridges
Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises (CGTMSE)
CGTMSE was established in 2000 jointly by the Ministry of MSME and SIDBI (Small Industries Development Bank of India) to facilitate collateral-free credit to micro and small enterprises. It provides credit guarantee cover to eligible lending institutions — enabling banks to lend without requiring borrowers to pledge physical assets or third-party guarantees. The guarantee cover reduces the risk for lenders, encouraging them to extend credit to the often asset-poor MSME sector.
- Established: August 30, 2000; operational from January 1, 2000
- Set up by: Ministry of MSME + SIDBI; corpus contributed in ratio of 4:1 (GoI : SIDBI)
- Eligible lenders: Scheduled commercial banks (PSBs, private, foreign), select RRBs, NSIC, NEDFi, SIDBI, select SFBs, NBFCs
- Guarantee coverage: 85% for micro enterprises (loans up to Rs. 5 lakh); 75% for loans between Rs. 5 lakh and Rs. 500 lakh
- Maximum loan covered under guarantee: Up to Rs. 5 crore
- Milestone: Approved guarantees worth Rs. 1 lakh crore during FY2022-23
Connection to this news: The RBI's decision to raise the collateral-free threshold to Rs. 20 lakh directly expands the coverage of CGTMSE-backed lending — more MSEs can now access formal credit without collateral, with the risk absorbed by the guarantee scheme rather than the borrower.
MSME Sector: Definition, Role, and Credit Gap
The MSME sector is defined under the MSME Development Act, 2006 (amended by MSMED Act), with revised classification criteria introduced in 2020 based on both investment in plant and machinery/equipment and annual turnover. MSMEs contribute approximately 30% of India's GDP, 45% of exports, and employ over 110 million people. Despite their economic importance, MSMEs face persistent credit access constraints due to lack of formal credit history and collateral — a gap that CGTMSE and priority sector lending norms are designed to address.
- MSME classification (revised 2020): Micro (investment < Rs. 1 crore, turnover < Rs. 5 crore); Small (investment < Rs. 10 crore, turnover < Rs. 50 crore); Medium (investment < Rs. 50 crore, turnover < Rs. 250 crore)
- MSME Development Act, 2006: The primary statute governing MSME policy
- Priority Sector Lending (PSL): RBI mandates banks to lend 40% of Adjusted Net Bank Credit (ANBC) to priority sectors; MSMEs are a sub-target (7.5% of ANBC for microenterprises)
- Formal credit gap: A large portion of MSMEs (especially micro) rely on informal credit at higher rates
- Collateral-free limit history: Rs. 5 lakh (original) → Rs. 10 lakh (2010) → Rs. 20 lakh (2026)
Connection to this news: The doubling of the collateral-free limit is essentially an indexation adjustment for 16 years of inflation, but it also signals a policy intent to expand formal credit penetration into the micro segment of MSMEs that typically fall below the old Rs. 10 lakh threshold.
Priority Sector Lending and Last-Mile Credit Delivery
The RBI's Priority Sector Lending (PSL) guidelines require banks to deploy specified percentages of their credit in sectors deemed socially and economically priority — agriculture, MSMEs, housing (affordable), export credit, education, and renewable energy, among others. Non-compliance results in mandatory contribution to RIDF (Rural Infrastructure Development Fund) or other specified funds at lower returns, creating a penalty for underperformance. The collateral-free limit revision complements PSL by removing a key barrier to micro lending within the MSME category.
- PSL total target: 40% of ANBC (Adjusted Net Bank Credit) for domestic banks
- MSME sub-target: 7.5% of ANBC for lending to micro enterprises
- Penalty for non-compliance: Contribution to RIDF (NABARD) or similar funds at below-market returns
- Foreign banks (>20 branches): 40% PSL target (same as domestic), but different sub-target structure
- Small Finance Banks (SFBs): 75% PSL target, with emphasis on smaller borrowers
Connection to this news: By raising the collateral-free threshold, RBI makes it easier for banks to lend to micro enterprises and count those loans toward their PSL targets — a dual benefit of financial inclusion and regulatory compliance.
Key Facts & Data
- Previous collateral-free limit: Rs. 10 lakh (set in 2010; increased from Rs. 5 lakh)
- New collateral-free limit: Rs. 20 lakh (effective April 1, 2026)
- Extended discretionary limit for good performers: Up to Rs. 25 lakh (bank's internal policy)
- CGTMSE established: 2000 (jointly by Ministry of MSME and SIDBI)
- CGTMSE corpus ratio: Government : SIDBI = 4:1
- Maximum guarantee coverage: Up to Rs. 5 crore per borrower
- Guarantee coverage rate: 85% (micro up to Rs. 5 lakh); 75% (above Rs. 5 lakh up to Rs. 500 lakh)
- CGTMSE milestone: Rs. 1 lakh crore in guarantees approved in FY2022-23
- MSME share: ~30% of GDP, 45% of exports, 110 million+ jobs
- PSL MSME micro target: 7.5% of ANBC for domestic banks