Small businesses across the United States faced a tougher year than national economic headlines suggested, according to data released by cloud accounting platform Xero. The company’s latest Small Business Insights (XSBI) report, drawn from anonymized information provided by 32,000 American subscribers, shows that while Wall Street marked fairly strong gains and GDP posted solid growth in 2025, many Main Street operations struggled to keep pace in this economic environment.
The analysis covers eight years of trends through December 2025 and paints a picture of divergence.
The S&P 500 climbed roughly 17 percent last year, and nominal GDP averaged 5.1 percent growth.
In contrast, year-over-year sales at the tracked small firms averaged only 2.4 percent—roughly half the long-term benchmark of 5.5 percent for the series.
Momentum actually strengthened for most of 2025 before stalling sharply.
Revenue generation rose 1.9 percent in the first quarter, picked up to 2.9 percent in the second, and reached 4.1 percent in the third, with September alone posting a standout 7.1 percent increase.
However, the final quarter of the year saw growth collapse to just 0.9 percent—the weakest reading since late 2023.
This slowdown occurred even after Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts in October and December, as the lagged effects of tariffs rippled through supply chains and dampened customer demand.
Economist Louise Southall at Xero noted that conditions can shift rapidly. Rate reductions may boost confidence, she explained, yet other policy pressures can still weigh on smaller operators long after they are implemented, creating a mismatch with broader market optimism.
On a more positive note, cash-flow pressures eased as payment behavior improved steadily.
The average delay in receiving payments beyond due dates fell every quarter, dropping from 9.3 days in March to 7.8 days by December—the shortest interval in four years and a full day below the eight-year average of 8.8 days.
Similarly, the overall wait time from invoice issuance to payment shortened from 29.2 days early in the year to 27.9 days in the final quarter, marking the quickest collection period since December 2021 and again one day under the historical norm.
Uncertainty remains the dominant challenge.
Frequent swings in monetary policy and trade measures continue to cloud pricing, costs, and buyer behavior.
Andrew Kanzer, Xero’s North America managing director, highlighted the contrasting signals: healthier payment cycles are helping stabilize finances, yet softening sales growth underscores how vulnerable smaller enterprises are to policy shifts.
He stressed that disciplined cash management and cost control will stay critical until demand firms up and the economic outlook becomes more predictable.
The findings, accessible via Xero’s Small Business Insights dashboard, underscore why aggregated national statistics often fail to capture the daily pressures felt by independent operators. As 2026 unfolds, the data offers a reminder that economic health requires paying closer attention to the backbone of the US economy—its small businesses.