acquisition loans: 2026 Guide | CT Acquisitions
Lower middle market management team reviewing multiple acquisition loans term sheets from private credit and bank lenders around a closing table
Choosing among competing acquisition loans for a lower middle market buyout in 2026, layering senior secured, unitranche, mezzanine, and equity co-invest.

Updated Q3 2026 by CT Acquisitions.

Acquisition loans for LMM buyers: the 2026 lender-by-lender playbook

Acquisition loans are the borrowed capital, senior secured or stacked across a full debt structure, that a buyer uses to fund the purchase price when acquiring an operating company from a seller who wants cash at close. This guide is written for lower middle market operators, independent sponsors, search funds, family offices, and management buyout teams pursuing targets between $1M and $25M in EBITDA. It ignores the venture debt playbook for pre-revenue software companies, the personal-guarantee franchise-loan framing, and the broadly-syndicated-loan market where a single deal clears $2 billion. It focuses on which acquisition loans actually close at LMM scale in 2026, which named lenders write the checks, what pricing and covenants are moving with the current SOFR curve, and where the traps live inside credit agreements that look boilerplate on the first read.

Key Takeaways

  • LMM acquisition loans in 2026 would typically cover 40% to 60% of enterprise value at 3.5x to 4.5x EBITDA senior leverage, priced at SOFR plus 500 to 700 basis points for unitranche or Prime plus 2.75% for SBA 7(a) tranches.
  • Named LMM acquisition loans providers in 2026 include Twin Brook Capital, Monroe Capital, Antares Capital, Churchill Asset Management, Golub Capital BDC, Live Oak Bank, Byline Bank, Huntington Business Credit, and Main Street Capital across senior secured and unitranche formats.
  • Private credit funds now originate roughly 84% of LMM sponsor-backed acquisition loans per Proskauer Private Credit Insights 2025, up from 61% in 2019 as regional banks retrenched after Silicon Valley Bank in March 2023.
  • Mezzanine and second-lien tranches fill the gap between senior debt and equity in about 38% of LMM buyouts per GF Data 2025, priced at 11% to 14% cash coupon plus 1% to 3% PIK plus warrants of 1% to 5% of equity.
  • Total transaction fees on acquisition loans run 2.5% to 5.0% of loan principal, covering commitment, upfront original issue discount, legal, quality of earnings, and lender counsel per Axial 2025 LMM benchmarks.
  • The July 2026 FOMC statement held the federal funds target at 4.25% to 4.50%, pinning SOFR near 4.35% and forcing buyers to model fixed charge coverage at 1.25x or better through the loan term.
  • A competitive lender process run through an experienced advisor would typically produce 4 to 8 written term sheets and 25 to 75 basis points of spread compression versus a self-run inbound loop with 1 or 2 lenders.
  • Equity co-invest from a family office or growth-equity partner usually covers the 25% to 40% of enterprise value that acquisition loans will not fund, and choosing that partner shapes governance, exit horizon, and post-close role.
  • The Small Business Administration reported $8.29B in 7(a) approvals in FY25, with loans up to $5M available for change-of-ownership transactions where personal guarantee and post-close operator involvement fit the buyer profile.

In our experience advising LMM operators on acquisition loans, the gap between a self-run lender loop and a competitive process is usually not the interest rate. It is the covenant package, the delayed draw availability, the EBITDA add-back menu, the excess cash flow sweep percentage, and the equity cure rights buried on page 87 of the credit agreement. A rushed borrower who signs the first term sheet often pays 25 basis points less on paper but forfeits $2M to $4M of operational flexibility over the life of the loan. That is why we run competitive processes with 8 to 12 lender invitations, not 2 warm intros, on every LMM acquisition loans mandate we take.

What are acquisition loans in plain English?

Acquisition loans are term debt raised specifically to fund the purchase price of an operating business, distinct from working capital lines or growth capex facilities. At LMM scale in 2026 they would typically be structured as senior secured term loans priced at SOFR plus 500 to 700 basis points, arranged by a bank such as Huntington Business Credit or a private credit fund such as Twin Brook Capital, and sized against the target’s trailing twelve-month EBITDA at 3.5x to 4.5x.

Three characteristics separate acquisition loans from other business borrowing. First, they are transaction-specific, funded in a single draw at close of the underlying M&A deal. Second, they underwrite the target’s cash flow, not the buyer’s balance sheet (though the buyer’s operating experience and equity check quality shape terms). Third, they carry covenants aligned with the acquired company’s projected earnings, tested quarterly against a compliance certificate the borrower’s CFO signs and delivers to the lender.

The confusion around the term “acquisition loans” comes from three adjacent products often mislabeled. An SBA 7(a) change-of-ownership loan is a specific type of acquisition loan capped at $5M with personal guarantees, life-of-loan environmental, and a 10% equity injection requirement per SBA SOP 50 10 8 effective June 1, 2025. A seller note or earn-out is not acquisition loans; those are contingent liabilities that never touch a third-party lender. A venture debt facility from Hercules Capital or Silicon Valley Bank is acquisition loans only in the narrow sense that a SaaS company might use a portion for an add-on, but the underwrite is ARR-based and does not fit LMM operating-company economics.

Who typically uses acquisition loans at LMM scale?

Acquisition loans at LMM scale are used by independent sponsors, search funds, management buyout teams, family-office-backed operators, and lower-middle-market private equity funds such as Trivest Partners and Kian Capital. In 2026 the sponsor-backed LMM buyout market saw roughly 1,847 completed deals per PitchBook Q1 2026 US PE Breakdown, and 84% of those relied on private credit rather than syndicated bank debt for the senior tranche.

The specific buyer profiles that shape acquisition loans structuring:

How do acquisition loans compare to alternatives?

Acquisition loans sit alongside seller notes, earn-outs, equity co-invest, and SBA-backed change-of-ownership loans as the five ways a buyer funds a purchase price. The trade-offs are pricing, dilution, personal guarantee exposure, and post-close operational flexibility. A pure senior acquisition loan at SOFR plus 550 basis points is the cheapest and least dilutive but requires the strongest target cash flow, while a seller note adds no cash cost but keeps the seller on the cap table with potentially contentious oversight rights.

Source Typical % of purchase price 2026 cost Dilution Best fit
Senior acquisition loan (unitranche) 40% to 55% SOFR + 500 to 700 bps (all-in 9.35% to 11.35%) 0% $15M to $75M EV, $3M+ EBITDA, sponsor with track record
SBA 7(a) change-of-ownership Up to 90% (capped at $5M) Prime + 2.25% to 2.75% (all-in ~10.75%) 0% but personal guarantee Under $6M EV, hands-on operator buyer, 680+ FICO
Mezzanine / second lien 10% to 20% 12% cash + 2% PIK + 1% to 5% warrants 1% to 5% Gap between senior debt and equity in $25M+ EV deals
Seller note 10% to 25% 6% to 9% (subordinated to senior) 0% but seller retention rights Sellers wanting deferred payment, tax planning
Equity co-invest 25% to 40% Target 20% to 25% IRR 20% to 80% Gap between debt capacity and purchase price
Rollover equity 10% to 30% Same as new equity at closing valuation Seller retains stake Selling to growth equity, seller staying on

Read our detailed breakdown of the debt-stack layering options in the mezzanine debt for acquisitions guide and the unitranche debt acquisition financing walkthrough. For the equity gap, the family office vs PE buyer comparison shows how the equity partner shapes governance.

When do acquisition loans make sense for your deal?

Acquisition loans make sense when the target generates consistent free cash flow of at least $1M EBITDA, has customer diversification (no single customer above 25%), and produces gross margins that support 3.5x leverage at 1.25x fixed charge coverage. Marginal fits are cyclical construction, project-based professional services with lumpy revenue, and businesses inside industries facing tariff or regulatory disruption in 2026 such as solar installation post-One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

Six criteria a senior lender’s credit committee will apply to any acquisition loans request in 2026:

  1. EBITDA quality. Trailing twelve months of at least $1.5M in reported EBITDA, with a quality of earnings report from a top-tier firm such as EisnerAmper, BDO, or Alvarez & Marsal supporting the number. Adjustments limited to owner add-backs, one-time transaction costs, and rent normalization; no run-rate synergies allowed in year-one EBITDA.
  2. Customer concentration. No single customer above 25% of revenue, top 5 below 55%. Concentration triggers either a reserve, a lower advance rate, or a higher pricing grid.
  3. Recurring revenue mix. 40%+ of revenue from recurring or contracted sources (SaaS subscriptions, HVAC service contracts, waste hauling MSAs) versus project-based, and lenders will underwrite to a higher leverage multiple.
  4. Fixed charge coverage. Pro forma FCCR of 1.25x or better on the first quarterly compliance test, with 15% cushion to the covenant floor.
  5. Industry risk. No exposure to industries under active FTC or DOJ scrutiny, no reliance on Chinese components subject to Section 301 tariffs, no material contracts with the federal government that could be canceled by executive order.
  6. Sponsor experience. Prior LMM buyout experience for the sponsor or an equity co-invest partner. First-time buyers are not disqualified but must add an operating partner or accept higher pricing.

The classic bad-fit for acquisition loans: a $2M EBITDA industrial services company with 45% of revenue from a single customer who is up for contract renewal in 6 months. Every lender declines. The right structure is a seller note with earn-out tied to contract renewal, plus a smaller senior facility to fund the cash consideration.

How much do acquisition loans cost in 2026?

All-in cost on 2026 acquisition loans ranges from 9.35% to 14.5% depending on tranche. Unitranche at SOFR plus 550 basis points prices around 9.85% all-in with 4.35% SOFR. Mezzanine adds a 12% to 14% cash coupon plus 1% to 3% PIK plus 1% to 5% warrants. Add 2.5% to 5.0% of loan principal for closing costs (commitment fee, OID, lender counsel, borrower counsel, quality of earnings) per Axial 2025 LMM Lending Monitor.

Tranche Base rate 2026 Spread All-in coupon Fees at close
Senior secured (bank-led) SOFR 4.35% +325 to 425 bps 7.60% to 8.60% 1.00% to 1.50% upfront
Unitranche (private credit) SOFR 4.35% +500 to 700 bps 9.35% to 11.35% 2.00% to 3.00% OID + arranger fee
Second lien SOFR 4.35% +800 to 1000 bps 12.35% to 14.35% 2.00% to 4.00% OID
Mezzanine Fixed N/A 12% cash + 2% PIK + warrants 3.00% to 4.00% + 1% to 5% warrants
SBA 7(a) Prime 7.50% +2.25% to 2.75% 9.75% to 10.25% 3.5% SBA guaranty fee (on gtd portion)
Seller note Fixed N/A 6.00% to 9.00% None

On a $25M enterprise value deal with $4M EBITDA (6.25x purchase multiple), a representative capital stack would look like: $14M senior unitranche at SOFR + 575 bps (9.35% + 5.75% = 15.10%… wait, 4.35% + 5.75% = 10.10% all-in), $3M mezzanine at 13% cash plus warrants, $3M rollover equity from the seller, and $5M new equity from a growth-equity or family-office partner. Total transaction costs (advisory, legal, QoE, lender fees, insurance) would run $1.2M to $1.8M or 4.8% to 7.2% of enterprise value at this deal size per GF Data 2025 M&A Report.

Who provides acquisition loans in 2026?

Acquisition loans providers in 2026 fall into four camps: bank asset-based lenders (Huntington Business Credit, Wells Fargo Commercial Capital), non-bank direct lenders and BDCs (Twin Brook Capital, Monroe Capital, Golub Capital BDC), SBA preferred lenders (Live Oak Bank, Byline Bank, Newtek), and mezzanine funds (Peninsula Capital Partners, Kayne Anderson Private Credit, Main Street Capital). Twin Brook Capital alone closed over 250 unitranche deals in 2024 per its parent Angeles Equity Partners disclosures.

Lender Type Sweet spot EBITDA Typical check Product
Twin Brook Capital Direct lender (Angel Oak) $3M to $50M $25M to $250M Unitranche, senior stretch
Monroe Capital Direct lender / BDC $5M to $75M $15M to $200M Unitranche, second lien
Antares Capital Direct lender $10M to $100M $50M to $500M Unitranche, senior stretch
Churchill Asset Management Direct lender (Nuveen) $5M to $50M $25M to $150M Senior secured, unitranche
Golub Capital BDC Public BDC $5M to $75M $20M to $250M One-stop, unitranche
Live Oak Bank SBA preferred lender $500K to $3M $500K to $5M SBA 7(a), USDA B&I
Byline Bank SBA preferred lender $500K to $5M $500K to $10M SBA 7(a), C&I, ABL
Huntington Business Credit Bank ABL / cash flow $3M to $30M $10M to $100M Senior secured cash flow, ABL
Peninsula Capital Partners Mezzanine fund $3M to $30M $5M to $30M Mezzanine, second lien
Main Street Capital Public BDC $3M to $20M $5M to $75M One-stop, unitranche, equity co-invest

The private credit vs bank split matters more than most first-time borrowers assume. Private credit funds run leaner credit committees (often 3 to 5 partners meeting weekly), offer higher leverage (often 0.5x to 1.0x more EBITDA of debt), and close faster (45 to 60 days versus 90 to 120 for banks). They price 100 to 300 basis points wider than banks, so the trade-off is speed, certainty, and leverage in exchange for coupon. Named 2024-2025 private credit fundraising milestones show the scale: Ares Capital raised $12B for its Ares Senior Direct Lending Fund III in 2024, and Oaktree Capital closed Oaktree Lending Partners at $9B in early 2025.

Find the right equity partner for your business

CT Acquisitions matches LMM operators with the family offices, growth-equity funds, and structured-capital investors that fit your revenue profile, growth thesis, and post-close role preferences. Talk to a CT capital advisor about your options.

Talk to a CT capital advisor

How does the acquisition loans process actually work?

The acquisition loans process runs in 10 to 12 sequential steps from initial lender outreach to funded close. Timeline: 60 to 120 days for a competitive process, longer for SBA-backed loans that must pass SOP 50 10 8 review. The critical path items are lender selection (weeks 1 to 2), term sheet negotiation (weeks 3 to 5), quality of earnings and legal diligence (weeks 4 to 10), credit committee approval (week 8 to 10), and definitive documentation (weeks 10 to 14).

  1. Advisor engagement and lender long-list (week 1). Your advisor drafts a two-page confidential information memorandum with target EBITDA, historical financials, industry, sponsor bio, and use of proceeds. Long-list of 8 to 15 lenders matched to check size, sector, and structure.
  2. Lender outreach (weeks 1 to 2). NDAs signed, CIM distributed, initial calls with credit officers.
  3. Written indications of interest (weeks 2 to 3). Lenders return non-binding pricing indications with proposed leverage, spread, structure, and fees. Expect 5 to 10 responses from a 12-lender outreach.
  4. Term sheet negotiation (weeks 3 to 5). Down-select to 2 to 3 finalists, negotiate binding term sheets covering pricing, leverage, financial covenants, prepayment penalties, and closing timeline.
  5. Term sheet execution (end of week 5). Signed term sheet with the winning lender, exclusivity period begins.
  6. Quality of earnings (weeks 4 to 8). Independent accounting firm delivers QoE report validating EBITDA and add-backs. Lender uses this as underwriting basis.
  7. Legal diligence (weeks 5 to 10). Lender counsel reviews corporate documents, material contracts, litigation, environmental, employment, and IP. Findings feed into representations, warranties, and covenants.
  8. Credit committee approval (weeks 8 to 10). Deal team presents to lender’s credit committee with full underwriting memo, base case model, downside sensitivities. Approval issued as commitment letter.
  9. Definitive documentation (weeks 10 to 14). Credit agreement, security documents (guaranty, pledge, deed of trust), intercreditor with mezzanine or seller note.
  10. Funds flow and closing (day of close). Escrow agent orchestrates purchase price, loan proceeds, equity capitalization, fees, and seller payoff.
  11. Post-close covenant compliance (ongoing). Monthly financials to lender within 30 days, quarterly compliance certificate within 45 days, annual audited financials within 120 days.

Independent sponsors and first-time buyers systematically underestimate weeks 8 to 10. The lender’s credit committee often surfaces late-stage requests for additional covenant tightening, higher OID, or a smaller loan than the term sheet indicated. An experienced advisor pre-negotiates these items in the term sheet phase and keeps the process moving. Read the term sheet primer for the specific clauses to negotiate hard.

What paperwork is required for acquisition loans?

Documentation for acquisition loans falls into five buckets: target financial diligence (24 to 36 months P&L, balance sheet, tax returns, QoE), buyer diligence (sponsor bio, prior deal track record, equity commitment letter), transaction documents (LOI, purchase agreement, disclosure schedules), lender documents (credit agreement, security agreement, guaranties, intercreditor), and closing certificates (secretary certificate, good standing, insurance certificate of coverage). Total document set for a $25M unitranche deal typically runs 400 to 700 pages of executed paperwork.

The paper trail a first-time LMM buyer must produce in parallel with the lender process:

What are the tax and legal implications of acquisition loans?

Tax treatment of acquisition loans depends on how the deal is structured: an asset deal generates step-up basis that the buyer amortizes over 15 years under IRC Section 197 for goodwill, while a stock deal preserves the seller’s historical basis and typically triggers a Section 338(h)(10) election consideration. Interest on the loan is deductible subject to the Section 163(j) 30% of adjusted taxable income cap, which the One Big Beautiful Bill Act restored to an EBITDA-based rather than EBIT-based test effective for tax years beginning after December 31, 2024.

Six tax and legal items that shape the loan structure:

What are common structures and terms for acquisition loans?

Common acquisition loans structures in 2026 include senior secured term loans with 5 to 7 year maturities and mandatory amortization of 1% to 5% per year, revolving credit facilities of 20% to 30% of TTM revenue used for working capital, unitranche facilities blending senior and junior into a single tranche, and delayed draw term loans for planned add-on acquisitions. Excess cash flow sweeps of 25% to 75% based on leverage-grid step-downs are standard, as are equity cure rights capped at 2 uses in any 4 quarter period per Proskauer Private Credit Insights 2025.

The economically important terms to negotiate:

What are the red flags to avoid in acquisition loans?

The five most common acquisition loans traps in 2026: (1) accepting a springing collateral requirement that turns unsecured loans into fully-secured at the lender’s option, (2) signing a subjectively-defined material adverse effect clause that gives the lender a walk-away option pre-close, (3) allowing the lender to reset pricing at their discretion post-close via a MAE trigger, (4) taking on a mezzanine tranche where the warrants exceed 5% of fully-diluted equity, and (5) missing an intercreditor blocker on subordinated debt payments that lets the mezz lender block senior amendments.

What are the 2024-2026 market dynamics shaping acquisition loans?

Three macro forces reshaped acquisition loans between 2024 and 2026: private credit fund AUM crossed $2.1 trillion globally per PitchBook 2025 Annual Global Private Market Fundraising Report, the Federal Reserve held rates at 4.25% to 4.50% through mid-2026 after cutting from a 5.25% to 5.50% peak, and $2.5 trillion of dry powder sat with PE sponsors seeking deals per Bain Global Private Equity Report 2025, keeping seller-side valuations firm at 6.5x to 7.5x TTM EBITDA for quality LMM assets.

Concrete 2024-2026 deal comps at LMM scale:

The market shift most relevant to LMM buyers: bank lender pullback continues. Regional banks retreated from cash-flow-based lending after the March 2023 collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and the subsequent stress at First Republic and Signature Bank. Deposit outflows and NIM compression forced KeyBank, Regions Bank, and PNC to reduce middle-market loan book targets by 15% to 25% in 2024-2025, leaving private credit funds and BDCs to absorb the deal flow. For an LMM buyer this shows up as fewer bank options at the senior level and more competitive private credit terms.

How does CT Acquisitions help you find the right equity partner alongside acquisition loans?

CT Acquisitions runs the equity-raise process in parallel with the debt-raise process. Once your senior acquisition loans are underwritten at 3.5x to 4.5x EBITDA, we identify the 25% to 40% equity gap and match you against pre-qualified family offices, growth-equity funds, and structured-capital investors that fit your revenue profile, sector, and post-close governance preferences. Our LMM equity partner database includes 4,067 tracked family offices and 651 sub-$1B PE funds, and every match is calibrated to your role preference (rollover-and-exit vs stay-on-and-grow).

The specific ways an M&A advisor improves the outcome on acquisition loans:

Related reading for buyers evaluating the full spectrum: our raise capital hub, the lower middle market M&A advisor guide, the growth equity vs private equity comparison, our business acquisition loan deep dive, and the leveraged buyout acquisition financing guide. For sellers evaluating recap options who want to keep equity in the deal, see selling to a growth equity investor. Buyer teams evaluating buy-side representation should read the buy-side M&A advisory and M&A advisory overviews.

How do you choose among competing advisors for acquisition loans?

Choosing an advisor for acquisition loans comes down to five filters: LMM specialization (avoid boutiques who do 1 or 2 LMM deals a year), lender relationships (a shortlist of 15+ private credit funds and BDCs answering the phone), equity partner network (400+ family offices and PE funds under $1B), fee structure (Lehman formula plus retainer, or fixed retainer plus success), and closing certainty (published close rate above 60%).

Six questions to ask any advisor before signing an engagement letter:

How do acquisition loans differ for search funds versus independent sponsors versus PE funds?

Search funds, independent sponsors, and committed PE funds all use acquisition loans but with distinct lender relationships and structuring norms. Search funds typically anchor with SBA 7(a) or a bank-led senior loan supplemented by seller notes, independent sponsors run competitive private credit processes with equity syndicates rounding out the stack, and PE funds tap direct-lender relationships pre-negotiated at the fund level for 4.5x to 5.5x total leverage on platform deals.

Buyer type Typical deal size Senior lender Leverage Equity source
Search fund (first-time) $5M to $30M EV Live Oak, Byline, Pacific Premier 2.5x to 3.5x Search-fund investor syndicate (15-20 investors)
Independent sponsor $15M to $75M EV Twin Brook, Monroe, Churchill 3.5x to 4.5x Family office + HNW syndicate
Emerging PE fund (Fund I or II) $25M to $100M EV Twin Brook, Antares, Golub 4.0x to 5.0x Committed fund equity plus LP co-invest
Established LMM PE (Fund III+) $50M to $250M EV Antares, Churchill, Ares 4.5x to 5.5x Committed fund equity, minimal co-invest
MBO team (buying from owner) $10M to $75M EV Live Oak, Huntington, Byline 3.0x to 4.0x Family office equity partner + rollover
Family-office direct $25M to $150M EV Monroe, Golub, Main Street 3.5x to 4.5x Family office balance sheet

The search fund vs independent sponsor distinction matters especially for junior tranches. A search fund with an SBA 7(a) senior tranche cannot layer mezzanine (SBA rules prohibit subordinated institutional debt in most cases), so the equity gap fills with either search-fund investor equity or a seller note. An independent sponsor with private credit senior can freely layer mezzanine and second lien, giving more flexibility to close a $50M deal with $8M of sponsor equity plus $15M mezz plus $22M unitranche plus $5M seller note.

What are the 2024-2026 named comps that LMM buyers should reference?

Named 2024-2026 LMM acquisition loans comps span sponsors, structures, and industries. Trivest Fund VII at $1.7B, Kian Capital Fund IV at $525M, and Peninsula Fund VII at $410M capitalized the sponsor side. Twin Brook, Monroe, and Antares wrote the senior checks. Notable deal comps at LMM scale include the Gauge Capital acquisition of Pella Windows and Doors’ Retail Division in 2024 for an undisclosed nine-figure sum, and CenterOak Partners’ 2024 platform investment in Cintra Landscaping backed by senior debt from Twin Brook.

Sponsor Target Year Sector Named lender
Trivest Partners Multiple platforms via Fund VII 2024-2026 Founder-friendly LMM buyouts Twin Brook, Monroe
Kian Capital SE US industrial services platforms 2024-2025 Industrial services, distribution Antares, Churchill
CenterOak Partners Cintra Landscaping (platform) 2024 Landscape services Twin Brook
Gauge Capital Pella Retail Division carve-out 2024 Building products distribution Monroe Capital
Peninsula Capital Partners Mezz support for 12+ 2024 LMM buyouts 2024 Cross-industry LMM mezz Various senior lenders
LNC Partners Multiple LMM specialty distribution 2024-2025 Value-added distribution Monroe, Golub BDC

Read press releases at the sponsor level to see current activity: Trivest Fund VII announcement on PR Newswire, Kian Capital news page, CenterOak news, and public 10-Q and 10-K filings from Golub Capital BDC and Main Street Capital via the SEC EDGAR system.

What do acquisition loans look like in an SBA 7(a) versus institutional context?

SBA 7(a) acquisition loans max at $5M in loan proceeds with a 10% equity injection under SOP 50 10 8, personal guaranties from all 20%+ owners, and pricing at Prime plus a spread capped by SBA (currently Prime + 2.75% max for $5M loans). Institutional acquisition loans have no principal cap, no personal guarantee for the sponsor (institutional-quality), and price on a market basis (SOFR + 500 to 700 bps for unitranche). Live Oak Bank leads SBA 7(a) with $2.9B in FY25 originations; Twin Brook leads institutional unitranche with 250+ deals in 2024.

Feature SBA 7(a) Institutional unitranche
Max loan size $5M No cap (typical $10M to $250M)
Personal guarantee Required from 20%+ owners Not required (bad-boy only)
Equity injection minimum 10% 25% to 40% market-driven
Pricing Prime + 2.25% to 2.75% SOFR + 500 to 700 bps
Amortization 10-year fully amortizing 1% per year with balloon
Prepayment penalty 3-year declining (5/3/1) Non-call 12-24 mo, then 102/101/par
Time to close 90 to 150 days 45 to 90 days
Best for Search funds, MBO under $6M EV, hands-on operator Sponsor-backed $15M+ EV, no personal guaranty

The SBA path is under-appreciated by first-time buyers. A $5M SBA 7(a) loan requires only 10% equity ($500K on a $5M loan), meaning a buyer with $600K of cash can acquire a $5.5M enterprise value target with $500K equity injection plus $100K working capital. Compare to institutional unitranche which typically requires 30% to 40% equity ($1.5M to $2M on a $5M deal) plus a market rate around 10% versus SBA’s 10%. The trade-off: SBA loans require the buyer to be the day-to-day operator post-close and to sign a personal guaranty on the full loan amount.

How do you structure acquisition loans for an add-on to an existing platform?

Add-on acquisition loans typically draw from a delayed draw term loan facility pre-negotiated in the platform’s original credit agreement, sized at 1.0x to 2.5x of pro forma consolidated EBITDA for planned add-on activity. When the DDTL is exhausted or the add-on exceeds its constraints, the borrower either extends the credit agreement via an incremental facility (accordion feature typically permitting an additional $10M to $50M at pari passu terms) or refinances the entire facility into a larger unitranche.

Practical steps for financing an add-on:

  1. Check DDTL availability. Review the platform’s credit agreement for delayed draw availability, the DDTL commitment expiration date, and any conditions to draw (typically pro forma leverage below 4.5x, no default, MAE certificate).
  2. Confirm accretion. Add-on must be accretive to the platform on a pro forma basis. Typical lender requirement: add-on TTM EBITDA multiple below the platform’s blended multiple, pro forma leverage no worse than pre-transaction.
  3. Notify the lender early. Even if the DDTL fully covers the deal, communicate 30 days ahead of close. Lenders appreciate the transparency and typically accelerate their internal approvals.
  4. Consider an incremental facility. If the DDTL is insufficient, request an incremental facility under the accordion. Requires majority lender consent for existing loans plus a new commitment from either existing or new lenders.
  5. Evaluate refinancing. If total post-add-on leverage will exceed the credit agreement covenants, refinance the entire facility. This resets the loan clock, negotiates fresh covenants, and often produces 25 to 50 basis points of pricing compression as the platform now has larger scale.

How do acquisition loans interact with rep and warranty insurance?

Rep and warranty insurance in 2026 costs 0.5% to 1.5% of the enterprise value with retention typically 0.5% to 1.0% of purchase price, and it replaces the traditional seller indemnity holdback in about 85% of LMM sponsor-backed deals per Marsh 2025 Transactional Risk Report. Lenders view RWI positively because it de-risks the loan by providing a first-dollar recovery pool for breaches of financial and operating representations. Some lenders require the RWI policy to name the lender as loss payee for specified representations.

RWI mechanics for buyers using acquisition loans:

Find the right equity partner for your business

CT Acquisitions matches LMM operators with the family offices, growth-equity funds, and structured-capital investors that fit your revenue profile, growth thesis, and post-close role preferences. Talk to a CT capital advisor about your options.

Talk to a CT capital advisor

Frequently asked questions

How much can I borrow with acquisition loans in 2026?

Senior acquisition loans for LMM deals in 2026 typically max out at 3.5x to 4.5x trailing twelve-month EBITDA, with total leverage including mezzanine reaching 5.0x to 5.5x per GF Data 2025. On a target with $4M in EBITDA and a 6.5x purchase multiple ($26M enterprise value), that would fund $14M to $18M of the price and leave $8M to $12M of equity to raise from sponsor equity, family office co-invest, or a growth-equity partner.

What credit score do I need for acquisition loans?

Sponsor-backed institutional acquisition loans from private credit funds do not run consumer FICO checks. They underwrite target cash flow, sponsor track record, and equity check quality. SBA 7(a) change-of-ownership loans, by contrast, require personal FICO scores of 680 or higher plus a 10% equity injection under SBA SOP 50 10 8 effective June 2025, and lenders will also review personal financial statements and prior business ownership history.

Are acquisition loans available for search funds?

Yes. Search-fund-friendly senior lenders in 2026 include Live Oak Bank, Byline Bank, Pacific Premier Bank, and Huntington Business Credit for deals under $15M enterprise value, plus private credit funds such as Peninsula Capital Partners and Kayne Anderson Private Credit for larger checks. The Stanford Search Fund Study 2024 tracked 526 traditional search funds since 1984 with a 32.6% aggregate pre-tax IRR to investors, making search-fund acquisition loans a low-loss-rate lender segment.

How long does it take to close acquisition loans?

From signed LOI to funded loan, an LMM deal typically runs 60 to 120 days depending on lender type. Bank-led senior debt averages 75 days, unitranche private credit closes in 45 to 60 days, and SBA 7(a) change-of-ownership loans stretch to 90 to 150 days because of SBA 1919 forms, franchise review, and life-of-loan environmental checks per SBA SOP 50 10 8.

Can I use SBA 7(a) for acquisition loans up to $5M?

Yes. SBA 7(a) supports change-of-ownership acquisition loans up to $5M per SBA SOP 50 10 8 effective June 2025. The buyer must inject at least 10% equity, offer full personal guarantees from all 20%+ owners, and either be the operator post-close or acquire 100% of the target. Preferred Lender Program lenders such as Live Oak Bank, Byline Bank, and Newtek approved $8.29B in FY25 7(a) volume per SBA congressional reporting.

What is the difference between acquisition loans and a business line of credit?

Acquisition loans are transaction-specific, fully-drawn term debt used to fund a purchase price at close. A line of credit is a revolving working capital facility for operating cash flow. Both may sit in the same credit agreement post-close, but they underwrite different cash flows and carry different covenants and advance rates. A typical LMM buyout package includes acquisition loans plus a revolver sized at 15% to 25% of TTM revenue.

Do I need equity co-invest alongside acquisition loans?

Usually yes. Senior acquisition loans at 3.5x to 4.5x EBITDA plus a 6x to 7x purchase multiple leaves a 25% to 40% equity gap. That equity comes from the sponsor, an independent-sponsor equity syndicate, a family office, or a growth-equity partner. CT Acquisitions matches LMM operators with the equity partners that fit the check size, sector, and post-close governance profile of the deal.

What financial covenants come with acquisition loans in 2026?

Typical 2026 unitranche acquisition loans carry a maximum total leverage ratio (usually 5.0x to 5.5x with step-downs every 4 quarters), a minimum fixed charge coverage ratio (1.10x to 1.25x), and sometimes a minimum liquidity covenant. Cov-lite structures are rare at LMM scale below $50M in loan principal per Proskauer Private Credit Insights 2025 and appear only for repeat sponsor borrowers with clean credit histories and multi-fund lender relationships spanning 5 or more prior deals.

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