Title 15Commerce and TradeRelease 119-73

§692 Authority of Administration to guarantee payment of rentals by small business concerns under leases of commercial and industrial property

Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 14B— - SMALL BUSINESS INVESTMENT PROGRAM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV–A— - GUARANTEES › Part Part A— - Commercial or Industrial Lease and Qualified Contract Guarantees › § 692

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

The Administration may promise to pay rent for small businesses so they can get commercial or industrial leases. It can make that promise itself or work with qualified surety companies. It will only promise rent if a similar promise is not already reasonably available and if the Administration believes the small business is likely to follow the lease. The Administration should, when possible, share these guarantees with surety or other companies. The Administration charges a uniform yearly fee on its share of a guarantee, paid in advance, set by sound actuarial methods but never more than 2½ percent per year of the minimum annual guaranteed rent. It may also charge reasonable application fees to cover processing costs. To limit risk, the Administration may require the tenant to put up to one-fourth of the minimum yearly rent into escrow, require the landlord to try to re-rent the property and use the escrow before claiming the guarantee, allow a guarantor who pays to collect unpaid rent, and add other reasonable protections.

Full Legal Text

Title 15, §692

Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)The Administration may, whenever it determines such action to be necessary or desirable, and upon such terms and conditions as it may prescribe, guarantee the payment of rentals under leases of commercial and industrial property entered into by small business concerns to enable such concerns to obtain such leases. Any such guarantee may be made or effected either directly or in cooperation with any qualified surety company or other qualified company through a participation agreement with such company. The foregoing powers shall be subject, however, to the following restrictions and limitations:
(1)No guarantee shall be issued by the Administration (A) if a guarantee meeting the requirements of the applicant is otherwise available on reasonable terms, and (B) unless the Administration determines that there exists a reasonable expectation that the small business concern in behalf of which the guarantee is issued will perform the covenants and conditions of the lease.
(2)The Administration shall, to the greatest extent practicable, exercise the powers conferred by this section in cooperation with qualified surety or other companies on a participation basis.
(b)The Administration shall fix a uniform annual fee for its share of any guarantee under this section which shall be payable in advance at such time as may be prescribed by the Administrator. The amount of any such fee shall be determined in accordance with sound actuarial practices and procedures, to the extent practicable, but in no case shall such amount exceed, on the Administration’s share of any guarantee made under this part, 2½ per centum per annum of the minimum annual guaranteed rental payable under any guaranteed lease: Provided, That the Administration shall fix the lowest fee that experience under the program established hereby has shown to be justified. The Administration may also fix such uniform fees for the processing of applications for guarantees under this section as the Administrator determines are reasonable and necessary to pay the administrative expenses that are incurred in connection therewith.
(c)In connection with the guarantee of rentals under any lease pursuant to authority conferred by this section, the Administrator may require, in order to minimize the financial risk assumed under such guarantee—
(1)that the lessee pay an amount, not to exceed one-fourth of the minimum guaranteed annual rental required under the lease, which shall be held in escrow and shall be available (A) to meet rental charges accruing in any month for which the lessee is in default, or (B) if no default occurs during the term of the lease, for application (with accrued interest) toward final payments of rental charges under the lease;
(2)that upon occurrence of a default under the lease, the lessor shall, as a condition precedent to enforcing any claim under the lease guarantee, utilize the entire period, for which there are funds available in escrow for payment of rentals, in reasonably diligent efforts to eliminate or minimize losses, by releasing the commercial or industrial property covered by the lease to another qualified tenant, and no claim shall be made or paid under the guarantee until such effort has been made and such escrow funds have been exhausted;
(3)that any guarantor of the lease will become a successor of the lessor for the purpose of collecting from a lessee in default rentals which are in arrears and with respect to which the lessor has received payment under a guarantee made pursuant to this section; and
(4)such other provisions, not inconsistent with the purposes of this part, as the Administrator may in his discretion require.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Amendments

1970—Subsecs. (b), (c)(4). Pub. L. 91–609 substituted “part” for “title”. 1967—Subsec. (a). Pub. L. 90–104 struck out from introductory text “that are (1) eligible for loans under section 636(b)(3) of this title, or (2) eligible for loans under subchapter IV of chapter 34 of Title 42,” after “small business concerns”.

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Effective Date

of 1967 AmendmentAmendment by Pub. L. 90–104 effective 90 days after Oct. 11, 1967, see section 211 of Pub. L. 90–104, set out as a note under section 681 of this title.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

15 U.S.C. § 692

Title 15Commerce and Trade

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73