When bankers talk about “small business customers,” the mental picture is often the same:
A bustling local business with a loyal customer base, a team of employees, a healthy revenue stream, and a finance team running QuickBooks like clockwork.
The truth? That describes only a small fraction of the small business market.
According to the SBA and FDIC, only about 9% of small businesses earn more than $1 million annually. That means over 90% are making less — often much less. In fact, non-employer firms, which make up 82% of all small businesses, report an average annual revenue of under $50,000.
Even among employer firms, the majority have between one and four employees. These are local trades, consultants, food truck operators, and professional service providers. They are deeply rooted in their communities but often operating with thin margins, wearing multiple hats, and making financial decisions in real time.
This isn’t just a demographic footnote — it’s the reality for millions of businesses. And it means that the “small business” accounts sitting in your portfolio are more likely to represent micro-firms or solo entrepreneurs than companies in the $2–5 million revenue range.
Here’s where the challenge emerges:
Most business checking products were designed with mid-sized and larger small businesses in mind — the ones already moving significant cash, using treasury services, and applying for larger loans.
For the rest of the market — the HVAC business with two employees, the wedding photographer working from home, the landscaper with a pickup truck and a helper — the checking account experience often feels like an afterthought. They might have:
Meanwhile, many of these business owners are forced to cobble together their essential workflows that also include accepting customer payments, accounting, financial record keeping, and financing growth. Often, this means turning to non‑bank providers to fill the gaps, relying on:
Every one of those tools is an opportunity for a third party to build a relationship and capture revenue that could belong to the bank.
Lending is another area where micro and small businesses face persistent challenges. Even when they have a strong relationship with a bank, the process of applying for and receiving credit is often slow, disconnected, and geared toward larger firms.
Many of these smallest businesses — especially those under $1 million in annual revenue — end up financing their growth in less-than-ideal ways. Surveys from the Federal Reserve and other industry sources show that a significant share rely on personal credit cards, personal savings, or loans from friends and family. Others turn to alternative online lenders, merchant cash advance providers, or fintech platforms that promise speed and simplicity, even if the cost is higher. These choices are often driven by the difficulty of qualifying for traditional bank credit, the length of the approval process, and a lack of tailored lending products.
The FDIC’s small business lending data confirms that smaller-revenue firms are less likely to be approved for bank loans, even though they have pressing needs:
For these businesses, even a small loan or line of credit can make the difference between plateauing and growing. Yet too often, they turn to sources outside their primary bank — especially online lenders and fintechs — that can meet them where they are, quickly and digitally.
When you step back and connect the dots, the picture becomes clear:
The majority of small businesses in your market are under $1 million in annual revenue. Most have small teams or no employees at all. Many do not use accounting software, rely on manual processes, and lack easy access to credit.
And yet — these are the very businesses that represent your largest growth opportunity.
Imagine offering a business checking account that does more than hold deposits:
For the business owner, their business checking account becomes the single, trusted hub for managing their money, customers, and growth. For the bank, it’s a deeper relationship, more engaged accounts, and a natural pathway to cross-sell lending and other services.
Fintechs aren’t waiting to serve this segment. QuickBooks has moved from accounting software into banking, payments, and lending. Square is courting brick-and-mortar merchants with banking services. Stripe is embedding financial products into digital storefronts.
If banks don’t step in with a modern, integrated business checking experience, these third parties will continue to capture the daily financial relationship — and the lifetime value — of your small business customers.
The under-$1M revenue business market is massive, underserved, and ready for a better solution. By designing a business checking account with the tools they need to operate — all in one place — your bank can seize this opportunity before someone else does.