While true, this answer is a bit misleading. There is a minimum threshold for stellar black holes–the ones created through stellar evolution–it's called the Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff limit.
> There is a minimum threshold for stellar black holes–the ones created through stellar evolution–it's called the Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff limit.
That limit gives the maximum size of a neutron star, but it does not say an object smaller than that cannot form a black hole. In fact, it is considered likely that supernova explosions could cause an implosion that could form a black hole smaller than the limit, simply because it happens too fast for neutron degeneracy pressure to stop it before the implosion reaches the Schwarzschild radius.
That limit gives the maximum size of a neutron star, but it does not say an object smaller than that cannot form a black hole. In fact, it is considered likely that supernova explosions could cause an implosion that could form a black hole smaller than the limit, simply because it happens too fast for neutron degeneracy pressure to stop it before the implosion reaches the Schwarzschild radius.