SBA 7(a) Loan for Business Acquisition: The 2026 Buyer’s Guide

Christoph Totter · Managing Partner, CT Acquisitions

20+ home services M&A transactions across HVAC, plumbing, pest control, roofing · Updated May 19, 2026

The SBA 7(a) loan is the dominant acquisition financing for sub-$5M business acquisitions in the United States. Backed by the Small Business Administration, these loans enable individual buyers and search funders to acquire businesses with as little as 10-15% equity contribution. Maximum loan size: $5M (recently increased from $3.75M). Amortization: 10 years. Interest rate: Prime + 2-2.75% (~10-11% in 2026). Personal guarantee required.

For sellers, SBA-financed deals are different from PE or strategic acquisitions. SBA buyers typically: individual first-time acquirers or search funders, 10-15% equity contribution + 85-90% SBA financing, slower approval timeline (60-120 days from LOI), structured deal mechanics (seller financing often required), and lower offering multiples (3-5x EBITDA typical vs PE 5-9x). Understanding the SBA-buyer playbook is critical for sellers in the sub-$5M EBITDA range.

SBA 7(a) loan application documents on executive desk with business acquisition LOI, calculator showing financing structure, brass desk lamp warm light
SBA 7(a) loans are the dominant acquisition financing for individual buyers and search funders. Up to $5M, 10-year amortization, 75-85% LTV, but personal guarantee required.

“The SBA 7(a) loan is what enabled the rise of acquisition entrepreneurship as a career. Without it, the gap between ‘I want to buy a business’ and actually buying one would be impassable for most first-time acquirers.”

TL;DR — the 90-second brief

  • SBA 7(a) loans are the most common acquisition financing for sub-$5M business acquisitions in 2026. Maximum loan $5M, 10-year amortization, 75-85% LTV (loan-to-value) typical, 10-11% interest rate (Prime + 2-2.75%).
  • Used by: individual buyers (first-time and experienced), search funders, family-business successors, growth-stage entrepreneurs. Not used by PE firms (different financing structures) or strategic acquirers.
  • Requires personal guarantee from buyer; 10-15% buyer equity contribution typically.
  • Approval process: 60-120 days typical from LOI to funding. Top SBA-acquisition lenders: Live Oak Bank, Newtek, Huntington, Pacific Premier, Wells Fargo, ReadyCap.
  • CT Acquisitions works with SBA-buyer financed transactions in the $1M-$5M EBITDA range. The buyer pays our fee at close — the seller pays nothing.

Key Takeaways

  • SBA 7(a) loan: up to $5M maximum, 10-year amortization, 75-85% LTV, 10-11% interest rate (Prime + 2-2.75%).
  • Buyer typically contributes 10-15% equity; seller financing required in 30-50% of deals.
  • Personal guarantee required from buyer; usually personal real-estate collateral.
  • Approval timeline: 60-120 days from LOI to funding.
  • Top SBA-acquisition lenders 2026: Live Oak Bank, Newtek, Huntington Bank, Pacific Premier, ReadyCap, Wells Fargo, BBVA, others.
  • Used by individual buyers, search funders, family-business successors. Not used by PE firms or strategic acquirers.
  • SBA buyers typically pay 3-5x EBITDA (vs PE 5-9x), so SBA-financed deals trade at lower multiples than competitive PE auctions.
  • Seller financing common in SBA deals: 5-15% of purchase price as seller note typical.

What is an SBA 7(a) loan?

The SBA 7(a) loan program is the largest SBA loan program, designed to help small businesses access financing they couldn’t obtain from conventional lenders. SBA partially guarantees the loan (typically 75% guarantee for loans above $150K, 50% guarantee for larger amounts), which reduces lender risk and enables more flexible terms. For business acquisitions specifically, the 7(a) loan covers business purchase price up to $5M (maximum loan size as of 2025).

Three primary use cases for 7(a) loans. Business acquisition: the focus of this guide. Maximum loan $5M; covers stock or asset purchase. Working capital: up to $5M for operating businesses needing capital. Real estate purchase: commercial real estate as part of business operations, often combined with 7(a) for acquisition + 504 for real estate.

SBA 7(a) loan terms in 2026

Standard SBA 7(a) terms in 2026. These terms apply across approved SBA lenders, with some variation by lender risk appetite.

Term Standard 2026 Notes
Maximum loan size $5,000,000 Increased from $3.75M recently
Amortization 10 years Some lenders offer 25 years for real estate component
Interest rate Prime + 2-2.75% (~10-11% in 2026) Variable rate; resets quarterly
Buyer equity contribution 10-15% of purchase price Higher (20-25%) for first-time buyers
LTV (loan-to-value) 75-85% Includes goodwill in business value
Personal guarantee Required Plus personal real-estate collateral typical
Seller financing Often required 5-15% of purchase price as seller note
Closing fee (SBA guaranty fee) 0.50-3.75% Higher for larger loans
Lender fees 1-2% of loan amount Origination, underwriting
Approval timeline 60-120 days from LOI Varies by lender efficiency
Component Typical share of price When you actually receive it Risk to seller
Cash at close 60–80% Wire on closing day Low — this is real money
Earnout 10–20% Over 18–24 months, performance-based High — routinely paid out at less than face value
Rollover equity 0–25% At the next platform sale (typically 4–6 years) Variable — can multiply or go to zero
Indemnity escrow 5–12% 12–24 months after close (if no claims) Medium — usually returned, sometimes contested
Working capital peg +/- 2–7% of price Adjustment at close or 30-90 days post High — methodology disputes are common
The headline LOI number is rarely what hits your bank account. Cash-at-close is the only line that lands the day of close; everything else carries timing or performance risk.

Who uses SBA 7(a) for acquisitions?

Four primary buyer types use SBA 7(a) financing. Not used by PE firms, family offices, or strategic acquirers — they use different capital sources.

  1. Individual first-time buyers. The majority of SBA-financed acquisitions. Aspiring acquisition entrepreneurs buying their first business.
  2. Search funders. MBA graduates raising committed-capital search funds for single-acquisition focus. Often layer SBA on top of investor equity.
  3. Family-business successors. Family members buying out departing owners (parents, partners, siblings) using SBA financing.
  4. Growth-stage entrepreneurs. Existing business owners buying additional businesses or competitor consolidation.
Buyer type Cash at close Rollover equity Exclusivity Best fit for
Strategic acquirer High (40–60%+) Low (0–10%) 60–90 days Sellers who want a clean exit; competitor or upstream consolidator
PE platform Medium (60–80%) Medium (15–25%) 60–120 days Sellers willing to hold rollover for the second sale; bigger deals
PE add-on Higher (70–85%) Low–Medium (10–20%) 45–90 days Sellers folding into existing platform; faster process
Search fund / ETA Medium (50–70%) High (20–40%) 90–180 days Legacy-conscious sellers wanting an owner-operator successor
Independent sponsor Medium (55–75%) Medium (15–30%) 60–120 days Sellers OK with deal-by-deal capital and longer financing closes
Different buyer types structure LOIs differently because their economics differ. A search fund’s earnout-heavy 50% cash deal looks worse than a strategic’s 60% cash deal—but the search fund’s rollover often pays back at multiples in 5-7 years.

How to qualify for an SBA 7(a) acquisition loan

Qualification has both buyer-side and target-side requirements. Below are the typical criteria SBA lenders apply.

Buyer-side qualification

Buyer must demonstrate: financial capacity, relevant management experience, and willingness to provide personal guarantee. Specific criteria: (1) Liquidity: 10-15% of purchase price in cash; some lenders accept retirement account rollover via ROBS (Rollovers as Business Startups). (2) Credit score: 680+ minimum, 700+ preferred. (3) Management experience: 3-5 years in target industry or transferable management; first-time buyers can sometimes substitute formal education (MBA) or operational experience. (4) Personal guarantee: required; includes personal real-estate collateral typical.

Target-side qualification

Target business must demonstrate: financial profile, transferability, and continuing operations. Specific criteria: (1) EBITDA: $300K minimum typical; $1-5M EBITDA is sweet spot. (2) Debt service coverage ratio (DSCR): 1.25x or higher (post-acquisition business cash flow must cover SBA loan payments). (3) 3+ years operating history: clean financials, profitable for 2+ years. (4) Transferability: low owner-dependence; customer relationships and key staff transitionable. (5) Industry: most SBA-eligible (not gambling, lending, life insurance, multi-sales-marketing, etc. — see SBA ‘Excluded Industries’ list).

Selling to an SBA-financed buyer?

CT Acquisitions works with SBA-financed buyers in the $1M-$5M EBITDA range and connects sellers to qualified individual and search-fund buyers. The buyer pays our fee at close — the seller pays nothing.

Book a 30-Min Call

Top SBA-acquisition lenders in 2026

Five lenders dominate SBA acquisition financing. Each has different speed, deal-size preference, and underwriting approach.

  • Live Oak Bank. Largest SBA lender by volume. Specializes in acquisition financing. Strong relationship with search funders. 60-90 day typical timeline.
  • Newtek (now NewtekOne). Major SBA player. Particularly strong on tech/services acquisitions. 75-100 day typical.
  • Huntington National Bank. Top conventional bank with SBA practice. Strong on Midwest/regional deals.
  • Pacific Premier Bank. West-coast focused; strong on professional services and healthcare.
  • ReadyCap Lending. Specialty SBA lender. Fast turnaround for clean deals.
  • Other major players. Wells Fargo, BBVA (now PNC), Synovus, M&T Bank, BancorpSouth, others.

The SBA acquisition loan process

From LOI to funding, the SBA acquisition loan process typically takes 60-120 days. Below is the canonical timeline.

  1. Pre-LOI: lender pre-qualification. Buyer connects with SBA lender, shares personal financial information + target business profile, receives indication of loan size + terms.
  2. LOI signed (Day 0). Buyer signs LOI with seller; LOI references SBA financing contingency.
  3. Days 1-14: Loan application. Buyer submits full loan application: personal financial statement, tax returns (3 years), business plan, target diligence package.
  4. Days 15-45: Underwriting. Lender reviews application, conducts target business diligence (financial, credit, industry, market), produces internal approval.
  5. Days 45-60: SBA approval. Lender submits to SBA for guaranty approval. Typically 7-30 days at SBA depending on workload.
  6. Days 60-90: Closing logistics. Title, insurance, escrow, definitive documents. Some lenders move faster.
  7. Days 90-120: Funding. Loan funds; deal closes; ownership transfers.
The 60-120 Day Post-LOI Timeline The 60-120 Day Post-LOI Timeline 10 parallel diligence workstreams from LOI signing to close Wk 1Wk 4Wk 8Wk 12Wk 14

Quality of Earnings (QoE) Week 2-7

Legal diligence Week 3-9

Insurance / R&W diligence Week 4-8

Employment / HR review Week 4-7

Customer / contract review Week 3-8

Working capital negotiation Week 5-11

SPA drafting & negotiation Week 6-13

Financing close-out Week 8-13

Title / license transfer Week 10-14

Regulatory / compliance Week 10-14

Most diligence workstreams run in parallel, not sequentially. The pacing item is usually QoE completion (week 7) followed by working-capital peg negotiation. SPA drafting kicks off mid-process and overlaps everything.

Common SBA acquisition deal structures

SBA acquisition deals typically follow one of three financing structures. Each balances buyer equity, SBA loan, and seller financing.

Structure Buyer Equity SBA Loan Seller Note Notes
Pure SBA + buyer equity 20-25% 75-80% 0% Cleanest; requires high buyer liquidity
SBA + buyer equity + seller note (typical) 10-15% 75-80% 5-15% Most common LMM structure
SBA + heavy seller financing 10% 60-65% 25-30% Seller-friendly to seller (more cash later)
SBA + investor equity (search fund pattern) 5% buyer + 15% investor 75-80% 0-5% Search funder pattern

Seller financing in SBA deals

Seller financing (seller carry-back) is required by SBA in 30-50% of acquisition deals. When buyer equity is below 15% or DSCR is tight, SBA may require seller to finance 5-15% of purchase price. Seller note terms: typically 5-7 year amortization, interest at AFR (~5%), interest-only payments common in years 1-2. Seller note is subordinate to SBA loan (paid after SBA in default scenarios).

Why SBA-financed deals trade at lower multiples

SBA-financed acquisitions typically trade at 3-5x EBITDA vs PE auctions at 5-9x. Reasons: (1) buyer pool is individual buyers, not institutional with deep pockets, (2) financing structure limits acceptable price (DSCR constraints), (3) SBA fees and personal guarantee discourage aggressive pricing, (4) longer process (60-120 days) creates retrade risk. Sellers in the sub-$5M EBITDA range should run parallel processes when possible to access institutional buyers.

Common SBA deal mistakes

Five recurring mistakes destroy value in SBA acquisition deals. Each is avoidable. For the fuel-station and convenience-store sector, our guide on how to buy a gas station covers underground tank and franchise considerations.

  • Lender shopping after LOI. Engage lender pre-LOI for term confirmation. Switching post-LOI creates 30-60 day delays.
  • Underestimating personal guarantee scope. Personal guarantee can include personal real estate, retirement accounts, future earnings. Understand fully before signing.
  • Inadequate buyer due diligence. SBA lender does limited target diligence; buyer must conduct independent QoE, legal, operational review.
  • Cash flow over-projection. DSCR calculations rely on realistic post-acquisition cash flow. Over-optimistic projections create payment crisis.
  • Not negotiating seller financing terms. Buyer-favorable seller financing (interest-only years, low rate, long amortization) protects buyer cash flow. Push hard at LOI.

For sellers: navigating SBA-buyer deals

Sellers in SBA-buyer deals should prepare for specific dynamics. Below is the seller-side playbook. For franchise buyers specifically, our guide on how to buy a franchise covers FDD analysis and territory negotiation.

  1. Verify buyer pre-qualification. Before signing LOI, confirm buyer has SBA lender pre-approval and adequate equity.
  2. Expect seller financing. 5-15% of purchase price as seller note is standard in SBA deals. Negotiate terms (rate, amortization, security) carefully.
  3. Plan for 60-120 day timeline. Don’t over-tighten LOI exclusivity. Buyer needs time for SBA approval.
  4. Accept lower multiple than PE. SBA buyers typically pay 3-5x EBITDA. If business is institutional-scale, consider running parallel PE process.
  5. Get seller financing protections. Personal guarantee from buyer on seller note; security interest if possible. Default rate ~5-10% on SBA seller notes.

Conclusion

The SBA 7(a) loan is the dominant acquisition financing for sub-$5M business acquisitions. Maximum $5M loan, 75-85% LTV, 10-year amortization, 10-11% interest. Used primarily by individual buyers, search funders, family-business successors. Lower multiples than PE (3-5x vs 5-9x) but enables individual ownership for sub-$5M EBITDA businesses. CT Acquisitions works with SBA-financed deals — the buyer pays our fee at close.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an SBA 7(a) loan for business acquisition?

The SBA 7(a) loan is a government-guaranteed loan program for small business acquisitions and operations. For acquisitions specifically: up to $5M maximum loan, 10-year amortization, 75-85% LTV, 10-11% interest rate (Prime + 2-2.75%). Buyer typically contributes 10-15% equity; SBA partially guarantees the loan (typically 75%), reducing lender risk.

How much equity does an SBA buyer need?

Typically 10-15% of purchase price in cash equity. First-time buyers may need 20-25%. Buyer equity can include: cash savings, retirement-account rollover via ROBS structure, gift from family member (with documentation), HELOC on personal real estate. SBA requires buyer to have skin in the game.

What’s the interest rate on an SBA 7(a) acquisition loan?

Prime + 2-2.75% in 2026, so approximately 10-11% with Prime at 7.5%. Variable rate; resets quarterly based on Prime rate movements. Compare to conventional bank acquisition loans (often higher rate but fewer fees) and PE acquisition financing (different structure, lower effective rate but requires larger buyer).

How long does SBA loan approval take?

60-120 days from LOI to funding. Stages: pre-LOI lender pre-qualification (1-2 weeks), application submission (1-2 weeks), underwriting (4-6 weeks), SBA guaranty approval (1-4 weeks), closing logistics (2-4 weeks), funding. Lender efficiency matters — Live Oak Bank typically faster (60-75 days); other lenders 90-120 days.

Do I need seller financing for SBA deals?

Often yes, 30-50% of SBA acquisition deals include seller financing. SBA may require 5-15% of purchase price as seller note when: buyer equity is below 15%, DSCR is tight (1.25x or below), or target business has elevated risk. Seller note terms: 5-7 year amortization, AFR rate (~5%), interest-only years 1-2 common, subordinate to SBA loan.

What’s the maximum SBA 7(a) loan size?

$5M as of 2025 (increased from $3.75M recently). For deals above $5M total: structure as $5M SBA + buyer equity + seller note, OR use alternative financing structures (conventional bank loan, PE debt + equity, family-office direct). Deals above $10M EV typically don’t use SBA — they use PE financing structures.

Can a search funder use SBA 7(a)?

Yes, often. Common search-fund structure: searcher’s personal equity (~5%) + investor equity (~15%) + SBA 7(a) loan (~75-80%). Searcher’s investors provide growth capital; SBA provides senior debt. Some lenders specialize in search-fund deals (Live Oak Bank prominent). Approval timeline similar to other SBA acquisition deals.

Does SBA loan require personal guarantee?

Yes, always. Buyer must provide unconditional personal guarantee for the SBA loan. Guarantee includes: personal financial assets, often personal real-estate collateral, sometimes future earnings claim. If buyer defaults, SBA lender can pursue personal assets after exhausting business assets. This is the primary reason individual buyers approach SBA acquisitions carefully.

What industries can use SBA 7(a) acquisitions?

Most industries qualify; specific exclusions exist. Excluded: gambling, lending/insurance, multi-level marketing, life insurance brokerages, certain real-estate investment, religious organizations, pyramid structures, marijuana businesses (federally illegal). Most LMM industries qualify: HVAC, plumbing, services, manufacturing, distribution, healthcare, retail, restaurants. See SBA ‘Excluded Industries’ list for full details.

What’s the maximum debt-service coverage ratio for SBA?

Minimum DSCR is 1.25x (post-acquisition cash flow must cover SBA loan payments at least 1.25x). Strong DSCR (1.5x+) accelerates approval and expands lender options. Calculation: (Post-acquisition EBITDA – Working Capital – CapEx) ÷ Annual SBA Loan Payments ≥ 1.25. Lenders run this calculation pre-approval; over-optimistic projections trigger underwriting pushback.

How does SBA acquisition deal pricing compare to PE?

SBA-financed deals typically trade at 3-5x EBITDA vs PE auctions at 5-9x. Reasons: individual buyer pool (smaller pockets), financing structure constraints (DSCR limits), SBA fees, personal guarantee discouraging aggressive pricing, longer process timeline. Sellers in the $1-5M EBITDA range can sometimes access higher PE multiples by running parallel processes.

Why work with CT Acquisitions on SBA-financed deals?

CT Acquisitions works with SBA-financed buyers in the $1M-$5M EBITDA range. For buyers, we source qualified acquisition targets. For sellers, we know which SBA lenders close fast and which buyers are realistically qualified. The buyer pays our fee at close — the seller pays nothing.

Related Guide: Business Acquisition Financing Guide 2026 — All acquisition financing options

Related Guide: What Is a Search Fund? — Common SBA-loan use case

Related Guide: How to Find Businesses to Buy — Deal-flow channels for SBA buyers

Related Guide: Installment Sale Tax Treatment — Tax structure for seller financing

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CT Acquisitions is a trade name of CT Strategic Partners LLC, headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming.
30 N Gould St, Ste N, Sheridan, WY 82801, USA · (307) 487-7149 · Contact






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