SBA 7(a) Loan for Business Acquisitions: Terms, Requirements, and Process
The SBA 7(a) loan is the federal government's primary small business lending program and the dominant financing tool used in business acquisitions. The Small Business Administration doesn't lend money directly — it guarantees a portion of loans made by approved lenders (banks, credit unions, CDFIs), which reduces lender risk and allows them to approve deals and offer terms they wouldn't offer on conventional loans.
Key Loan Terms
- Maximum loan amount: $5,000,000
- SBA guarantee: 85% for loans up to $150K; 75% for loans above $150K
- Term for business acquisition: up to 10 years (25 years if real estate is included)
- Interest rate: variable, tied to prime rate (typically prime + 2.25% to 2.75%); as of mid-2026, prime is approximately 7.5%, so expect 9.75%–10.25%
- Down payment (equity injection): minimum 10% of the purchase price
- Personal guarantee: required from all owners with 20%+ ownership
- Collateral: business assets, and personal assets if business assets are insufficient
- Prepayment penalty: applies in the first 3 years for loans with terms of 15+ years
Eligibility Requirements
Both the buyer and the business being acquired must meet SBA eligibility criteria:
- Business must be for-profit and operate in the United States
- Business must meet SBA size standards (typically under 500 employees or under $7.5M in annual revenue, though size standards vary by industry)
- Buyer must demonstrate adequate management expertise
- Buyer must have good personal credit (650+ FICO is a common lender minimum; 680+ preferred)
- Business must have demonstrated sufficient cash flow to service the debt (DSCR of at least 1.25×)
The 10% Equity Injection Rule
SBA requires the buyer to inject a minimum of 10% of the purchase price as equity. This must come from the buyer's own funds (savings, 401(k) via ROBS, gift with documentation) — not borrowed money, not the SBA loan itself.
Seller financing can count toward the 10% equity injection, but only under specific rules: the seller note must be on full standby for 24 months (no principal or interest payments from the business during that period). This is a frequently misunderstood rule that can derail deals late in the process if not structured correctly from the start.
How SBA Loans Fit the Deal Stack
A typical SBA-financed acquisition looks like this:
- Purchase price: $800,000
- Buyer equity injection: $80,000 (10%)
- Seller note on standby: $80,000 (counts toward equity; on standby 24 months)
- SBA 7(a) loan: $640,000
Model this structure in the AcquireCalc deal calculator to confirm cash flow covers debt service. The key metric is DSCR — lenders want to see at least 1.25× after all debt payments.
Timeline
SBA loan approvals take 45–90 days from application to close, depending on the lender and whether the deal requires full SBA underwriting versus a Preferred Lender Program (PLP) lender who can approve loans in-house. PLP lenders are significantly faster. If speed matters, ask whether the lender has PLP status before submitting an application.
SBA Loan Fees
SBA charges a guarantee fee based on the guaranteed portion of the loan. For loans above $700K, this fee is typically 3.5% of the guaranteed amount — a real cost that should be budgeted into total acquisition cost. Some lenders roll these fees into the loan amount.
Related Terms
- DSCR — how lenders evaluate whether cash flow supports the loan
- Seller financing — often paired with SBA loans; standby rules apply
- Deal stack — how SBA loan fits alongside other funding sources
Sources & Further Reading
- SBA.gov — 7(a) Loans — official program terms and lender finder
- SBA Standard Operating Procedures (SOP 50 10) — complete underwriting guidelines lenders follow