Every few months, someone walks into a bank asking for a PMEGP loan when what they actually needed was Mudra Tarun. Or they apply under Stand-Up India when they’re not eligible. Or they spend three weeks chasing a CGTMSE loan without realizing their loan amount was too small for it to make a meaningful difference.
Government loan schemes aren’t complicated, but they’re designed for very different situations, and applying to the wrong one wastes time that most business owners can’t afford to waste.
This isn’t a list of schemes with copied-from-government-website descriptions. It’s an honest comparison of what each scheme is genuinely useful for, what it isn’t, and how to figure out which one actually fits where your business is right now.
At Sharda Associates, we help business owners choose the right scheme and prepare the CA-certified project report or documentation their chosen scheme requires. A complete project report is delivered within 24 to 48 hours at ₹2,999.
Scheme 1: Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY)
Best for: Small traders, service businesses, and micro manufacturers who need working capital or light equipment finance — across all stages from day one to established operations.
Loan range: ₹50,000 (Shishu) to ₹20 lakh (Tarun Plus, introduced October 2024)
Interest rate: Approximately 9.5% to 15% depending on bank and category. Public sector banks like SBI and PNB consistently offer the lower end of this range.
Collateral: None required across all categories.
What makes it genuinely useful: Mudra’s four-tier structure (Shishu, Kishor, Tarun, Tarun Plus) means it works across a wide range of business stages. A street food vendor needing ₹40,000 for equipment and a small garment unit needing ₹8 lakh for machinery can both find the right fit within the same scheme.
Where it falls short: For loan amounts above ₹10-15 lakh, bank scrutiny increases significantly and the application process is not as light as people assume. The Tarun Plus category (₹10-20 lakh) requires proof of a successfully repaid Tarun loan — meaning it’s only accessible to businesses that have already used Mudra once.
Project report needed? For Shishu, a basic business plan is usually enough. Kishor and above need a proper project report — banks get more careful as the amount increases.
Scheme 2: Prime Minister’s Employment Generation Programme (PMEGP)
Best for: First-generation entrepreneurs setting up a new manufacturing or service unit, especially in rural or semi-urban areas where the subsidy percentage is higher.
Loan range: Up to ₹50 lakh (manufacturing), ₹20 lakh (service sector)
Interest rate: Normal bank MSME lending rates — typically 9% to 12% at public sector banks. There’s no interest subsidy under PMEGP, but the margin money subsidy reduces how much you actually need to borrow.
Subsidy (Margin Money):
- General category — 15% (urban), 25% (rural)
- Special category (SC/ST, women, OBC, minorities, ex-servicemen, disabled) — 25% (urban), 35% (rural)
What makes it genuinely useful: The subsidy is the main draw. On a ₹25 lakh project, a general category rural applicant gets ₹6.25 lakh in subsidy — money that sits in a Term Deposit for 3 years and then gets credited against your outstanding loan. That’s a meaningful reduction in what you actually repay.
Where it falls short: PMEGP has an 88% application rejection rate nationally — and almost all rejections trace back to a poorly prepared project report, not to ineligible businesses. The scheme is real and the funding pipeline is genuine, but it demands documentation that holds up to bank scrutiny. Weak financial projections, unrealistic capacity utilization, or missing working capital analysis are the most common failure points.
Project report needed? Absolutely mandatory — and it needs to be thorough. This is one loan type where a CA certified project report makes the most direct difference between approval and rejection.
Scheme 3: Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises (CGTMSE)
Best for: Established micro and small businesses that need a larger loan — term loan or working capital — but don’t have property or assets to pledge as collateral.
Loan range: Collateral-free cover available up to ₹10 crore (revised April 2025). For DPIIT-recognized startups under linked CGSS scheme, up to ₹20 crore.
Interest rate: Bank’s standard MSME lending rate. SBI starts around 8.85%; private banks typically 11-14%. An Annual Guarantee Fee (AGF) of 0.37% to 1.35% is added on top, depending on loan size.
What makes it genuinely useful: It removes the collateral barrier for loans that would otherwise require property. For a small manufacturing unit owner who wants ₹50 lakh for expansion but doesn’t have land to mortgage, CGTMSE makes that loan possible. The bank takes the guarantee cover and lends without collateral.
Where it falls short: CGTMSE is not a separate loan — it’s a guarantee structure layered onto a normal bank loan. The bank still evaluates your application like any other loan: credit score, business viability, financial projections. The guarantee helps the bank feel safer, but it doesn’t lower the bar for what your documentation needs to show.
Project report needed? Yes. Since there’s no collateral for the bank to fall back on, the project report becomes the primary basis for the credit decision. A weak report here means a declined application regardless of the guarantee cover.
Scheme 4: Stand-Up India
Best for: SC/ST entrepreneurs and women entrepreneurs setting up a greenfield manufacturing, service, or trading business for the first time.
Loan range: ₹10 lakh to ₹1 crore (composite loan covering both term loan and working capital)
Interest rate: Bank’s base rate plus applicable spread — typically 9% to 11% at most public sector banks.
Collateral: Collateral-free under CGFSIL credit guarantee for eligible borrowers.
What makes it genuinely useful: Stand-Up India is one of the few schemes with a ₹1 crore ceiling that’s specifically designed for SC/ST and women entrepreneurs starting something new. As of early 2026, the scheme has supported over 2.2 lakh accounts with more than ₹55,000 crore in outstanding loans—this is a well-funded, well-established program.
Where it falls short: “Greenfield” is strictly interpreted. If you’re already running something and want to expand under a different category, Stand-Up India won’t apply. It’s genuinely for first-time ventures in the specific entrepreneur categories.
Project report needed? Yes, the scheme requires a detailed project report and business plan as part of the application. Given the ₹10 lakh minimum, banks take this seriously during appraisal.
Scheme 5: SIDBI SMILE (Soft Loan for MSMEs)
Best for: Established small and medium enterprises with existing operations and audited financials, planning significant expansion or technology upgrades.
Loan range: Soft loan component up to ₹20 lakh (₹30 lakh for SC/ST/women-majority enterprises), alongside a regular term loan component.
Interest rate: 9.15% to 9.35% per annum for the first three years; 11.70% to 12.70% from year four onwards. This two-phase structure gives cost relief during the initial investment period when revenue is ramping up.
What makes it genuinely useful: The combination of a regular term loan at market rate plus a soft loan component at concessional terms reduces your effective borrowing cost for the early years—when cash flow is typically thinnest. For businesses investing in manufacturing infrastructure or capacity expansion, this structure is more financially comfortable than a flat-rate term loan.
Where it falls short: SIDBI SMILE is not for new businesses. The scheme requires audited accounts and cash profit in the most recent financial year — meaning if you don’t have operational history and clean financials, this door is not open yet.
Project report needed? Yes, SIDBI’s credit appraisal is thorough, and a strong project report is central to how they evaluate applications.
Side-by-Side Summary
| Scheme | Best For | Max Loan | Subsidy/Guarantee | Project Report |
| Mudra | All stages, small amounts | ₹20 lakh | None | Required for Kishor+ |
| PMEGP | New enterprise setup | ₹50 lakh | 15-35% subsidy | Mandatory |
| CGTMSE | Collateral-free expansion | ₹10 crore | Guarantee cover | Mandatory |
| Stand-Up India | SC/ST & women, greenfield | ₹1 crore | Guarantee cover | Mandatory |
| SIDBI SMILE | Established unit expansion | ₹20L + term loan | Concessional rate | Mandatory |
How to Pick the Right One
If you’re starting fresh with no prior business: PMEGP (if you want subsidy support) or Mudra Shishu/Kishor (if you want a smaller, simpler loan).
If you’re SC/ST or a woman entrepreneur starting a new business above ₹10 lakh, Stand-Up India.
If you’re already operating and need growth capital without pledging assets: CGTMSE-backed term loan.
If you’re an established MSME planning a significant expansion with clean financials: SIDBI SMILE.
If you’re unsure and just need working capital to keep operations moving, consider Mudra Kishor or Tarun, depending on your requirement.
Conclusion
The government scheme landscape in India is genuinely well-funded—there’s real money available for new entrepreneurs, established MSMEs, women and SC/ST business owners, and everyone in between. The frustration most applicants feel isn’t because the schemes don’t work.
It’s because they applied to the wrong scheme, prepared weak documentation, or both. Matching your specific situation to the right scheme and then building documentation that holds up to bank scrutiny — those two steps account for most of the difference between an approved loan and a wasted application cycle. That’s exactly where Sharda Associates comes in.
📱 +91 89899 77769 🌐 shardaassociates.in
Tell us your business type, stage, and how much you need — we’ll tell you exactly which scheme makes the most sense and what your application needs. CA certified project report at ₹2,999, delivered in 24-48 hours.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Which government loan scheme is best for a new business in India ?
For new businesses needing smaller amounts, Mudra Shishu or Kishor is the simplest entry point. For new enterprises needing up to ₹50 lakh with subsidy support, PMEGP is specifically designed for first-time entrepreneurs. For SC/ST or women entrepreneurs starting above ₹10 lakh, Stand-Up India is the right fit.
2. Which scheme gives the highest subsidy on a government business loan?
PMEGP offers up to 35% margin money subsidy for special category applicants in rural areas — the highest subsidy percentage among mainstream central government MSME loan schemes.
3. Can I apply for more than one government loan scheme at the same time?
Generally no — most government schemes restrict simultaneous applications for the same project under multiple central government schemes. However, state government subsidies can sometimes be stacked with central schemes on different cost components.
4. Is collateral required for government MSME loans?
Not for most. Mudra loans are collateral-free across all categories. CGTMSE provides collateral-free cover up to ₹10 crore. Stand-Up India has guarantee coverage under CGFSIL. PMEGP is collateral-free up to the sanctioned limit.
5. What interest rate should I expect on a government MSME loan?
Public sector banks typically charge 9% to 12% per annum for most government-linked MSME loans. SIDBI SMILE starts at 9.15% for the soft loan component. Private banks charge 11-14%. Digital NBFCs are 14-24%.
6. How long does government loan scheme approval take?
Mudra Shishu: 7-10 working days. Mudra Kishor/Tarun: 2-4 weeks. PMEGP: 6-12 weeks including DIC verification and bank appraisal. CGTMSE-backed loans: 3-6 weeks. Stand-Up India: 4-8 weeks. SIDBI SMILE: 4-8 weeks.
7. Is a project report required for all government loan schemes?
For Mudra Shishu, a basic business plan is sufficient. For all other schemes — PMEGP, CGTMSE, Stand-Up India, SIDBI SMILE, and Mudra Kishor/Tarun — a proper project report is either mandatory or strongly expected by the bank.
8. What happens if my government loan scheme application is rejected?
You can typically reapply after addressing the specific rejection reason—usually a documentation issue, not permanent ineligibility. Getting your project report reviewed and corrected by a CA before resubmitting is the most effective first step.