$500K Etsy grant expected to help AltCap offer microloans to artists, creative entrepreneurs
April 14, 2023 | Startland News Staff
AltCap this week announced a new partnership with the global marketplace Etsy to provide microloans to artists and creative entrepreneurs in America’s Heartland.
Etsy has awarded AltCap, an impact-focused small business lender, a $500,000 grant to provide $1,000 to $10,000 loans through the ARTcap Microloan Fund to artists and creative entrepreneurs in Kansas, Missouri and Texas. Applications for these loans will open May 1.
RELATED: AltCap launches Heartland expansion to aid more small biz typically overlooked by lenders
The investment in the creative economy through the Etsy Uplift Fund will help lower barriers to entrepreneurship for creatives and provide more opportunities for economically-disenfranchised communities.
“Artists and creatives serve vital roles in our communities but have historically lacked access to flexible, patient capital, which has limited the growth of small businesses in the arts and culture sectors,” AltCap said in a press release.
As an experienced Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI), AltCap increases the flow of capital to communities and businesses not adequately served by mainstream financial institutions.
Since 2005, AltCap has deployed nearly $300 million to small businesses and real estate development projects in socially- and economically- disenfranchised communities.
“When AltCap created the ARTcap Microloan Fund in 2016, we wanted to show we were committed to helping artists and creatives fund their passion,” said Ruben Alonso, CEO of AltCap. “We’re honored that Etsy has chosen to help us deepen that commitment with this investment in AltCap and acknowledge the importance of arts and the creative community to the cultural and economic vitality of a city.”
The ARTcap Microloan Fund for Artists is expected to provide small business loans to fuel the passion of visual artists, musicians, photographers, actors, dancers, makers and creatives from every discipline. Funds may be used for working capital, such as equipment and materials, startup costs, or to support other growth opportunities.
Click here to learn more about the ARTcap Microloan Fund for Artists.
“We’ve learned from our previous work that when people have access to the resources they need to thrive, they are able to not only uplift themselves, but their families, the communities they live in and their local economies with them,” said Chelsey Mozen, senior director of impact and sustainability at Etsy. ”We are partnering with AltCap to provide artists and entrepreneurs in America’s heartland an opportunity to apply for microloans that can help their businesses grow.”
AltCap’s grant is part of the Etsy Uplift Fund, which supports nonprofits working to dismantle barriers to entrepreneurship. The local CDFI organization is one of four partners with which Etsy is working to deepen its impact and connect creative entrepreneurs with tools and resources that will help their businesses thrive.
Featured Business

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
‘The people demand mustard’: This stained glass artist dipped into corn dogs (and hungry shoppers ate it up)
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. LAWRENCE — Selling holiday shoppers on stained glass corn dogs was unexpectedly easy, said Darleen Schillaci; adding mustard and keeping up with buyers’ appetite, however, proved the meatiest challenge. The…
Skip shopping and shipping: Your guide to last-minute, KC-made gifts you can still get in stores
Forget naughty and nice: one Kansas City-pieced business has a puzzling present for each person on Santa’s “weird and mellow” list. Locals can still find them on KC-area store shelves — while they last. Birdie — a sister company to Stefanie and Tim Ekeren’s popular Kansas City Puzzle Company — packs each eye-catching box with…
One issue cuts across all political lines: How it could be the antidote to a divided America
Entrepreneurship is a way to unify the United States at a time with great political division, said Victor Hwang. “It’s an issue that cuts across party lines,” explained the founder and CEO of Right to Start. “And it’s something Americans really care about.” Hwang, previously an executive at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, recently published…
Small biz makers worry Trump tariffs could be ‘recipe for recession’; Economists, farmers share concerns about trade war
An enthusiastic smile spreads across Katie Mabry Van Dieren’s face as three small groups of new customers flow into her Brookside Plaza shop — a space filled as high as the Shop Local KC owner can reach with colorful, off-beat, and functional goods and gifts from Kansas City makers. “We smelled something wonderful from outside…


