PM Mudra Yojana: Eligibility, Loan & Apply Guide

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The Pradhan Mantri MUDRA Yojana — launched on April 8, 2015, by Prime Minister Narendra Modi with the establishment of the Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency as a dedicated institution under the Reserve Bank of India — addresses one of the most persistent structural barriers to economic growth in India’s non-corporate economy: the exclusion of micro and small business owners from formal credit markets. An estimated 577 lakh micro enterprises exist across India, most of them operating as sole proprietorships and informal partnerships in manufacturing, trading, and service sectors — employing the majority of India’s non-agricultural workforce — yet historically locked out of bank credit because they lack the collateral, the credit history, the balance sheets, and the financial documentation that commercial banks traditionally require before extending business loans.

PM Mudra Yojana disrupts this exclusion by providing collateral-free, guarantee-free business loans of up to ₹10 lakh through scheduled commercial banks, regional rural banks, small finance banks, microfinance institutions, and NBFCs — with the MUDRA institution providing refinance support to lending institutions that enables them to extend credit to micro enterprises without the full risk burden that would otherwise make such lending economically unviable for formal financial institutions. The scheme has disbursed over ₹27 lakh crore in cumulative loans since launch across more than 45 crore loan accounts — making PM Mudra Yojana the largest micro-enterprise credit program in India’s financial history and one of the most consequential financial inclusion initiatives globally.

The Three-Tier Loan Structure: Shishu, Kishore, and Tarun

PM Mudra Yojana’s most distinctive design feature is its three-category loan classification — Shishu, Kishore, and Tarun — which segments the micro enterprise credit market by enterprise stage and loan requirement rather than by sector or geography, enabling the scheme to serve businesses across the entire spectrum from a street vendor starting with ₹50,000 to an established small manufacturer seeking ₹10 lakh for expansion.

CategoryLoan AmountTarget Enterprise StageInterest RateCollateral
ShishuUp to ₹50,000Start-up micro enterprises — first-time borrowers1 to 12 per cent — bank discretionNone — collateral-free
Kishore₹50,001 to ₹5,00,000Established micro enterprises — growth capital8.05 to 12 per cent — bank discretionNone — collateral-free
Tarun₹5,00,001 to ₹10,00,000Mature micro enterprises — expansion funding11 to 14 per cent — bank discretionNone — collateral-free
Tarun Plus (2024 expansion)₹10,00,001 to ₹20,00,000Successful Tarun borrowers with a repayment track recordMarket rate — bank discretionMay require collateral

Who Is Eligible for PM Mudra Yojana Loans

The eligibility framework for MUDRA loans is intentionally broad — designed to include the widest possible range of non-corporate, non-farm micro and small enterprise owners who are excluded from mainstream commercial credit.

Eligible Applicant CategoryBusiness TypeLoan PurposeIncome Requirement
Individual sole proprietorsAny micro manufacturing, trading, or service enterpriseWorking capital, equipment purchase, business expansionNo minimum income — business viability assessed
Partnership firms — unregisteredSmall business partnershipsCapital needs as aboveBusiness plan or cash flow evidence
Private limited companiesMicro enterprises below the MUDRA thresholdCapital needsFinancial statements
Self-Help Group membersGroup-based micro enterprisesCollective business activitySHG track record
Joint liability groupsPeer-group credit mechanismBusiness needs of group membersGroup credit history
Artisans and craftsmenTraditional crafts; handloom; khadi; village industriesTool and equipment purchaseSkill certification or traditional occupation proof
Vendors and shopkeepersRetail trade; street vendingStock purchase; shop fittingBusiness existence proof
Service providersRepair shops, salons, transport operatorsEquipment; vehicles; expansionBusiness proof

Sectors Specifically Covered Under PM Mudra Yojana

SectorBusiness ExamplesMost Common Loan CategorySpecial Notes
Food ProcessingPapad making; pickle production; bakery; cateringShishu to KishoreWomen-led food processing prioritised
Textile and GarmentsTailoring; embroidery; weaving; ready-made garmentsShishu to TarunHandloom and power loom are both eligible
TransportAuto-rickshaw; e-rickshaw; school van; goods carrierKishore to TarunVehicle purchase as loan purpose
Community and Personal ServicesSalons; dry cleaning; repair shops; photographyShishu to KishoreService-based MSMEs widely covered
Retail TradeKirana shops; stationery; general merchandiseShishu to KishoreStock and working capital are primarily used
Agriculture AlliedPisciculture; poultry; dairy; bee-keepingShishu to KishoreNon-crop agriculture eligible
Healthcare and EducationClinics, tutorial centres, coaching institutesKishore to TarunService sector expanding category
ManufacturingArtisan products; small workshops; furnitureShishu to TarunEquipment and raw material finance

Step-by-Step Application Process for PM Mudra Loan

PM Mudra Yojana loans are sanctioned by the lending institution — not directly by MUDRA itself, which functions as a refinancing body. Applications are submitted to any scheduled commercial bank, regional rural bank, small finance bank, or MUDRA-registered microfinance institution.

Online Application through Udyamimitra Portal:

  1. Visit the Udyamimitra portal at udyamimitra.in — the government’s dedicated MSME credit facilitation platform
  2. Register as a new user using your mobile number and OTP verification
  3. Complete your business profile — select loan category (Shishu, Kishore, or Tarun) and loan purpose
  4. Fill in business details — enterprise type, sector, years in operation, annual turnover, and loan requirement
  5. Enter personal details — Aadhaar, PAN, address, and contact information
  6. Upload required documents — Aadhaar card, PAN card, business proof, bank statements, and identity photographs
  7. Select the preferred lending institution from the list of MUDRA-registered lenders in your area
  8. Submit the application — a reference number is generated
  9. The selected bank reviews the application and may request additional documents or a branch visit
  10. Upon approval, the loan is disbursed to the business account

Direct Bank Application:

Visit any scheduled commercial bank branch — State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, Punjab National Bank, Canara Bank, or any other MUDRA-registered lender — and request a PM Mudra Yojana loan application form. Most banks have dedicated MUDRA loan desks or MSME credit officers who process these applications.

Documents Required for PM Mudra Loan Application

DocumentShishu CategoryKishore CategoryTarun CategoryNotes
Aadhaar CardMandatoryMandatoryMandatoryKYC base document
PAN CardMandatoryMandatoryMandatoryTax identity required
Passport Photo2 photographs2 photographs2 photographsRecent colour photograph
Business Address ProofShop rent receipt; utility billSameSameConfirms business location
Business Existence ProofTrade licence; GST registration; Udyam certificateSame + financialsSame + 2 years financialsEstablishes a legitimate business
Bank Statements6 months12 months2 yearsDemonstrates cash flow
Quotation for EquipmentIf equipment purchaseIf equipment purchaseIf equipment purchaseFor asset-linked loans
Caste CertificateIf SC/ST priorityIf SC/ST priorityIf SC/ST priorityPriority processing

Mudra Card: The Working Capital Management Tool

One of PM Mudra Yojana’s most innovative features — and one that distinguishes it from conventional term loans — is the MUDRA Card issued to eligible borrowers alongside their loan sanction. The MUDRA Card is a debit card linked to a dedicated Mudra credit account that allows borrowers to withdraw working capital in instalments as needed rather than receiving the entire loan amount as a lump sum that must be immediately deployed.

MUDRA Card FeatureDetailsBenefit to Borrower
Card TypeDebit card — linked to Mudra credit accountFlexible withdrawal as business needs arise
Withdrawal FacilityATM withdrawal within the sanctioned credit limitCash available for daily business purchases
Revolving CreditInterest is charged only on the amount drawn and the time usedLower effective interest cost vs. full loan drawdown
RuPay PlatformIssued on National Payments Corporation’s RuPay networkWide acceptance — online and offline
Credit LimitUp to 10 per cent of the loan amount in revolving formWorking capital management without repeated applications
Usage TrackingAll transactions recorded — builds credit historyCredit bureau record for future loan upgrades

PM Mudra Yojana and Women Entrepreneurs: Priority Access

Women entrepreneurs receive priority consideration under PM Mudra Yojana — with many lending institutions offering reduced interest rates of 0.25 to 0.5 per cent below standard rates for women-led micro enterprises, faster processing timelines, and in some cases higher Shishu category limits. The government’s data consistently shows that women borrowers under MUDRA have lower non-performing asset rates than male borrowers, making them commercially preferable customers for lending institutions beyond the policy preference.

Women who are members of Self Help Groups that have maintained a satisfactory credit history with their SHG microfinance lending for two or more cycles are particularly well-positioned to access Kishore category loans, as the SHG credit track record serves as a proxy for business creditworthiness in the absence of conventional financial statements.

Checking PM Mudra Loan Status and Managing Repayment

After loan sanction and disbursement, borrowers can track their loan account status, outstanding balance, EMI schedule, and repayment history through the lending bank’s net banking or mobile banking portal, where the MUDRA loan account appears alongside other bank products. For borrowers who experience temporary cash flow difficulties during the loan tenure, the scheme permits restructuring of repayment schedules through the lending bank — a provision that acknowledges the inherent income volatility of micro enterprises and prevents a temporary revenue disruption from converting into a permanent default.

The Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro Units — managed by MUDRA — provides the guarantee cover that enables lending institutions to extend collateral-free MUDRA loans without absorbing the full credit risk, creating the commercial incentive structure that makes lenders willing to serve the micro enterprise segment that conventional risk models would otherwise price out of formal credit access entirely.

PM Mudra Yojana has converted the aspiration of micro enterprise ownership from a dream constrained by credit exclusion into an actionable economic opportunity supported by formal institutional capital — placing the financial resources of India’s scheduled banking system within reach of the street vendor, the artisan, the small manufacturer, and the service provider who collectively constitute the most dynamic and most numerous segment of India’s entrepreneurial economy.

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