Montana COVID-19 EIDL Help
A source-backed guide for Montana COVID-19 EIDL borrowers reviewing SBA servicing, Treasury collection stages, loan-size exposure, and professional-review questions.
Montana owners weighing a COVID EIDL letter need federal facts first and local context second. This page separates the two so you can see what actually applies to your Montana account.
The assessment on this page is a triage, not a verdict. For a Montana borrower it identifies a loan-size tier, a collection stage, and a business-status overlay, and it flags other debt types that may call for a different professional. It is worth knowing that two commonly asked-about paths are largely closed: SBA's Hardship Accommodation Plan ended in March 2025, and an offer in compromise is generally inaccessible for COVID EIDL, so the realistic options are narrower than online chatter suggests.
The collection stage is where Montana borrowers feel the most pressure, and it is worth understanding precisely. Treasury can pursue administrative wage garnishment up to 15% of disposable pay and can offset federal payments such as tax refunds and Social Security without going to court first. Around a 30% collection fee is generally layered on at referral. Importantly, Treasury states that state garnishment limits do not apply to this federal process, so Montana wage-protection rules are not the controlling authority here.
A recurring risk for Montana owners is the pitch that implies official status or a secret settlement track. No such Montana program exists, and a private company cannot resolve a federal debt on the government's behalf. Verify any contact through official SBA and Treasury websites, avoid upfront-fee or guaranteed-outcome promises, and remember that EIDL Pros is a private company with no government affiliation.
It helps a Montana owner to see the numbers. The COVID EIDL portfolio was about 3.9 million loans; more than 1.3 million are in default and over $75 billion charged off, and about 562,000 accounts (roughly $22 billion) were referred to Treasury and the DOJ in April 2026. Those figures are national, and Montana businesses are experiencing the same referral timeline as the rest of the country.
The EIDL obligation a Montana owner signed is federal, so the terms printed in the note govern regardless of the Mountain West economy or Montana state law. That cuts both ways: no local relief statute rewrites the balance, and no advertiser speaks for a hidden Montana forgiveness track. The productive questions are documentary — amount, status, sender, date, business condition, and whether collateral or a personal guaranty was part of the original file.
What to organize in Montana
- Montana borrowers use the federal SBA Loan Portal and COVID EIDL servicing channels for account-specific requests — there is no separate Montana program.
- Treasury's Cross-Servicing and Offset programs are federal processes for eligible delinquent nontax debt, and Montana garnishment limits do not control them.
- Montana entity, closure, exemption, and bankruptcy questions can still require review by a professional licensed in the state.
Is there a special Montana COVID EIDL forgiveness program?
No. A COVID EIDL is a federal obligation, and no Montana-specific forgiveness or settlement program changes the repayment terms SBA describes. Be cautious with anyone implying state affiliation or a secret government program.
Can a Montana attorney help with EIDL exposure?
Yes, for the questions that are genuinely local — such as entity dissolution, property exemptions, and whether bankruptcy fits, since a good-faith EIDL is generally dischargeable. A licensed Montana professional weighs those facts; this page only helps you frame them.