BankingLENS
The Atlanta skyline - regional editorial image for the Mississippi commercial lending market. Photo by Lance Asper on Unsplash.

SBA lenders by state

Top SBA 7(a) lenders in Mississippi, Q1 2026

57 banks call Mississippi home, holding $128.7B in combined assets. Below: the 15 most active commercial lenders among them, ranked from Q1 2026 call reports, with a one-line read on each.

Published June 14, 2026. Data from FFIEC call reports for the quarter ending March 31, 2026.

57
banks headquartered in Mississippi
$128.7B
total assets across state-HQ banks
11.0%
median C&I share of loans
$35.5B
largest state-HQ bank: Hancock Whitney Bank

If you are shopping an SBA 7(a) or conventional commercial loan in Mississippi, the bank you call first matters more than most borrowers think. A lender that already writes a lot of commercial credit and sits in your state is structurally likelier to say yes than a national name passing through. This page ranks the Mississippi-headquartered banks doing the most commercial lending right now, using public Q1 2026 FFIEC call-report data. It is the open-book version of what the paid report does with far more inputs.

Mississippi's banking is community-scale by necessity, a network of small lenders covering a state most national banks simply drive past.

The 15 most active commercial lenders in Mississippi

Ranked by commercial and industrial (C&I) loans outstanding, Q1 2026. Bank names link to the live BankingLens scorecard.

# Bank City Assets C&I share ROA Fit notes
1 Hancock Whitney Bank Gulfport $35.5B 29.9% 0.57% Large multi-state regional, an active C&I book.
2 Renasant Bank Tupelo $27.1B 12.9% 1.40% Large regional lender, a steady commercial book. CRE-heavy book.
3 Trustmark Bank Jackson $19.0B 15.3% 1.26% Large multi-state regional, a steady commercial book. CRE-heavy book.
4 Bankplus Belzoni $8.3B 12.0% 1.40% Regional commercial bank, a steady commercial book. CRE-heavy book.
5 Guaranty Bank and Trust Company Belzoni $3.0B 11.5% 0.91% Mid-size regional, a modest C&I share. CRE-heavy book.
6 Citizens National Bank of Meridian, the Meridian $1.9B 13.5% 1.46% Local commercial lender, a steady commercial book. CRE-heavy book.
7 Story Bank Dba Story Financial Partners Jackson $957M 18.9% 0.83% Small community bank, a steady commercial book. CRE-heavy book.
8 Citizens Bank of Philadelphia, the Philadelphia $1.5B 10.1% 0.68% Local commercial lender, a modest C&I share. CRE-heavy book.
9 Bank of Commerce Greenwood $1.2B 11.0% 1.16% Community bank, a modest C&I share.
10 Peoples Bank Mendenhall $503M 16.4% 2.83% Small local lender, a steady commercial book. Top-decile returns.
11 Merchants & Marine Bank Pascagoula $961M 14.3% 0.15% Small community bank, a steady commercial book. CRE-heavy book.
12 First State Bank Waynesboro $950M 11.5% 0.35% Small local lender, a modest C&I share. CRE-heavy book.
13 Bank of Holly Springs, the Holly Springs $597M 12.6% 1.38% Small community bank, a steady commercial book.
14 Commercial Bank, the De Kalb $286M 32.4% 0.88% Small local lender, heavy C&I concentration.
15 First Bank Mccomb $558M 13.5% 1.47% Small community bank, a steady commercial book. CRE-heavy book.

Assets and ratios are Q1 2026 FFIEC call-report figures. ROA is annualized return on assets. A bank's headquarters city is shown; many lend statewide and beyond.

C&I lending muscle, ranked

Commercial and industrial loans outstanding for the top 10 Mississippi-HQ lenders, Q1 2026. This is the single number our ranking leans on hardest.

Hancock Whitney Bank
$7.2B
Renasant Bank
$2.5B
Trustmark Bank
$2.2B
Bankplus
$758M
Guaranty Bank and Trust Company
$241M
Citizens National Bank of Meridian, the
$176M
Story Bank Dba Story Financial Partners
$164M
Citizens Bank of Philadelphia, the
$85M
Bank of Commerce
$69M
Peoples Bank
$67M

How we ranked these

Three steps, all of them transparent. First, we took every bank headquartered in Mississippi. Second, we kept only banks whose commercial and industrial (C&I) loans are at least 10 percent of the loan book (a bank that is 90 percent home mortgages is not your SBA lender, regardless of size). Of the qualifying banks, 33 cleared that bar. Third, we ranked them by C&I loan dollars outstanding, which already blends balance-sheet size with how committed a bank is to commercial credit, and kept the top 15.

This is an honest, simplified proxy. It does not see a bank's actual SBA 7(a) origination volume (that lives in SBA FOIA data, not the call report), its appetite for your industry, or whether it funded forty SBA loans last quarter or zero. The $49 Borrower Assist report folds all of that in and ranks against your specific deal, not just your state. That is the part worth paying for.

What Mississippi looks like for a borrower

Mississippi's banking is community-scale by necessity, a network of small lenders covering a state most national banks simply drive past.

Across 57 Mississippi-headquartered banks sits $128.7B in total assets, anchored by Hancock Whitney Bank in Gulfport at $35.5B. Half the state's lenders hold more than 11.0% of their loans in C&I, half less; the ranking below pulls the most commercial-heavy to the top.

None of that tells you which of these banks will fund your specific deal. A $400,000 restaurant acquisition and a $4M owner-occupied warehouse purchase have different optimal lender lists even in the same state, and the ranking above does not split by loan size, industry, or collateral. Treat it as your starting shortlist, not your final answer.

How to use this list

  1. Start with the bank near you that has the strongest commercial profile, not just the closest branch. A lender with a real C&I book understands your deal faster.
  2. Ask for the SBA or commercial lending group directly. The general line routes business deals slowly.
  3. Have a one-page summary ready: use of funds, cash flow, collateral, owner credit, timeline. Banks decide whether to engage in the first ninety seconds.
  4. Run two banks in parallel, not five. Two real conversations close a loan; five waste everyone's time.

Hero photo: The Atlanta skyline by Lance Asper on Unsplash, used here as a regional editorial image for Mississippi.

Want a ranked match for your scenario, not just your state?

$49 gets you a ranked PDF of 15 to 25 lenders aligned to your actual deal in Mississippi: loan size, industry, collateral, and owner profile, scored with SBA volume data the call report cannot show. Built for your scenario, dated, and yours to keep.

Get the Mississippi ranking - $49