Key Takeaways
- Minnesota asylee entrepreneurs operate restaurants, construction firms, tech companies, and service businesses
- No green card required — EAD and US business entity are sufficient
- SBA 2026 citizenship rule eliminated asylee access to SBA loans — Bankable is the private alternative
- 48-hour funding decisions based on your business revenue
- Serving Minneapolis, Saint Paul, Bloomington, Rochester and all Minnesota asylee business owners
Asylee entrepreneurs in Minnesota operate businesses across every sector of the economy — from restaurants serving their home country's cuisine to professional services firms, construction companies, and technology startups. The state's asylee population is concentrated in Minneapolis, Saint Paul, Bloomington, Rochester, where Minneapolis-Saint Paul's extraordinary Somali and Ethiopian asylee community — the largest Somali population outside Somalia — plus the Twin Cities' large Hmong, Karen, and Latin American asylee business ecosystem.
Minneapolis-Saint Paul is the single most important destination for Somali asylees in the United States. The Cedar-Riverside neighborhood in Minneapolis — sometimes called 'Little Mogadishu' — is a dense commercial district of Somali asylee-owned businesses: restaurants, clothing stores, money transfer services, travel agencies, and more. The Ethiopian community in the Twin Cities has also built a vibrant restaurant and service business district. Minnesota's Hmong community — dating to the 1970s-80s resettlement of Laotian war refugees — has multi-generational asylee-owned businesses.
Business Funding Challenges for Minnesota Asylees
Despite strong business performance, asylee entrepreneurs in Minnesota face the same capital wall as asylees nationwide: traditional banks require permanent residency, and the 2026 SBA rule change requires citizenship for all SBA-backed loans. This effectively closes the primary small business lending channel for every asylee in Minnesota, regardless of how long they have been waiting for green card processing.
Bankable provides private, non-SBA revenue-based funding that is not subject to SBA citizenship rules. We fund businesses with revenue — not immigration status. If your Minnesota business generates $10,000 or more per month, you likely qualify.
How to Qualify for Business Funding in Minnesota
- Work authorization: EAD card, I-94 with asylee status, or other valid work authorization
- US business entity: LLC or corporation registered in Minnesota or any US state
- Revenue: At least $10,000/month in business revenue (varies by industry)
- Operating history: At least 6 months in business
- Bank account: Active US business bank account
Industries with High Asylee Business Ownership in Minnesota
- Restaurant and food service
- Cleaning and janitorial services
- Construction and home improvement
- Transportation and logistics
- Healthcare and home care services
- Retail and e-commerce
- Professional services (consulting, accounting, legal, IT)
The SBA 2026 Rule Change — What Minnesota Asylees Need to Know
Effective 2026, the SBA requires all business owners to be US citizens or nationals for SBA 7(a), SBA 504, and SBA microloan programs. This rule explicitly eliminates asylees, TPS holders, DACA recipients, and other non-permanent residents from SBA eligibility — even if they have been legally authorized to work and run businesses for years. Bankable is the alternative: private, revenue-based funding with no green card requirement, decisions in 48 hours, and funding up to $5 million. Read about alternatives after an SBA rejection.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Asylees with work authorization (EAD), a Minnesota business entity, and at least $10,000/month in revenue qualify for Bankable's revenue-based funding. We are not an SBA lender and are not subject to the 2026 citizenship rule.
Minnesota offers some small business programs through its Department of Commerce and CDFI network, though most require lawful permanent residence. Bankable's private funding is available regardless of residency status.
No. Your business entity can be registered in any US state. Many Minnesota asylee business owners register in Delaware or Minnesota — both qualify.
No. The 2026 SBA rule requires 100% citizenship/national status for all SBA programs. Asylees are explicitly excluded. Bankable is the private alternative.
Decision within 48 hours. Funds deposited within 3-5 business days of approval and document signing.
Up to $5 million. The amount you qualify for is based on your business revenue, typically 1-2x your monthly revenue.
Yes. If you have work authorization (after 180 days of filing) and your business has revenue, Bankable can fund it. We do not look at your immigration case status.
3-6 months of business bank statements, EIN, EAD or valid work authorization, and basic business information. No tax returns required for amounts under $250K.