SBA 7(a) Loan to Buy a Business in 2026: Requirements, Terms, and Process
Quick Answer
An SBA 7(a) loan is the most common way to finance buying a small business, deals broadly under about $5 million. It can finance up to roughly 90% of the total project cost, with the buyer providing at least a 10% equity injection, and in many cases part of that injection can be a seller note on full standby (no payments for the loan term) rather than the buyer’s own cash. Terms: typically a 10-year amortization for a business-only acquisition (up to 25 years if real estate is included), a variable rate at prime plus a spread (the spread is capped by SBA rules and scaled to loan size), an SBA guaranty fee, and a personal guaranty from any owner of 20% or more. Key requirements: a for-profit business operating in the US that meets SBA size standards and isn’t in a prohibited industry; a buyer with relevant management or industry experience and decent personal credit; verifiable target financials; usually an asset-purchase structure; and an independent business valuation above a threshold. The process runs about 45-90 days with a preferred (PLP) lender. The constraint that governs everything: the business’s cash flow has to cover all debt service with cushion (a debt-service-coverage ratio comfortably above 1.0x, often 1.25x+) after a reasonable owner salary.

The SBA 7(a) loan is the workhorse of small-business acquisitions, it lets a qualified buyer purchase a business with as little as ~10% down (sometimes partly via a standby seller note), which is why most search-fund, ETA, and individual-buyer deals run on it. But the SBA has specific eligibility rules, the deal has to cash-flow, and certain things disqualify a transaction. This page covers the requirements, the terms, the process, and the deal-killers.
We are CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm, we source and screen acquisition targets for buyers, including SBA-financed ones. This is general orientation, not lending or legal advice; work with an SBA-preferred (PLP) lender and a transactional M&A attorney. For the broader financing picture, see business acquisition loan and how to finance a small business acquisition; for finding deals, how to find businesses for sale. If you’re an owner whose buyer will be using SBA financing, our free valuation tool and how to sell your business guide are the place to start.
What this guide covers
- Finances up to ~90% of project cost, buyer provides ~10% equity injection (part can be a seller note on full standby)
- Terms: ~10-year amortization for a business-only acquisition (up to 25 years with real estate); variable rate at prime + a spread (capped, scaled to loan size); SBA guaranty fee; personal guaranty from 20%+ owners
- Eligibility: for-profit US business meeting SBA size standards, not in a prohibited industry; buyer with relevant experience and decent credit; verifiable target financials; usually an asset-purchase structure
- Valuation required above a threshold for acquisitions and changes of ownership
- Process: ~45-90 days with a preferred (PLP) lender
- The governing constraint: the business’s cash flow must cover all debt service with cushion (DSCR comfortably above 1.0x, often 1.25x+) after a reasonable owner salary
How an SBA 7(a) acquisition loan works
The SBA doesn’t lend directly, it guarantees a portion of a loan made by a participating lender (a bank or non-bank SBA lender), which reduces the lender’s risk and lets them finance deals they otherwise wouldn’t. For a business acquisition:
- The loan can cover up to ~90% of the total project cost (purchase price plus eligible closing costs and working capital), with the buyer providing at least a 10% equity injection.
- Part of the buyer’s 10% injection can be a seller note on full standby, a note where the seller receives no payments (principal or interest) for the loan’s term, which the SBA allows to count toward the equity-injection requirement (lender- and deal-dependent; rules around this have evolved, confirm current SBA SOP requirements with your lender).
- The amortization is typically 10 years for a business-only acquisition (goodwill, equipment, working capital), or up to 25 years if commercial real estate is part of the deal (the loan can blend terms).
- The rate is usually variable, prime plus a spread, with the maximum spread capped by SBA rules and scaled to loan size (smaller loans allow a higher maximum spread). Some lenders offer fixed-rate options under SBA programs.
- There’s an SBA guaranty fee, a percentage of the guaranteed portion, scaled to loan size, typically financed into the loan.
- A personal guaranty is required from any owner of 20% or more; a lien on the buyer’s primary residence is common if there’s significant equity.
Eligibility, who and what qualifies
| Requirement | What it means |
|---|---|
| For-profit, US-based business | The target must be a for-profit business operating in the United States |
| SBA size standards | The business (and buyer’s affiliated businesses) must be ‘small’ under SBA size standards for the industry, generally by revenue or employee count; most lower-middle-market and smaller businesses qualify |
| Not a prohibited industry | Certain businesses are ineligible, e.g., passive real estate, lending, speculation, gambling, certain others; check with your lender |
| Buyer eligibility | Generally a US citizen or lawful permanent resident; decent personal credit; relevant management or industry experience (a first-time buyer with no related background is a harder underwrite); no recent bankruptcies or unresolved federal debts; not currently incarcerated, on probation, or under indictment |
| Equity injection | At least ~10% of the project cost, generally the buyer’s own funds (not a personal loan), with a documented and seasoned source, except a standby seller note, which can count toward part of it |
| Verifiable target financials | Tax returns matching the P&L; the lender needs to verify the cash flow that supports the loan |
| Structure | SBA acquisition loans generally prefer (and often require) an asset-purchase structure rather than a stock purchase, with limited exceptions |
| Business valuation | An independent business valuation is required above a stated threshold for acquisitions and changes of ownership; below the threshold the lender may do an internal valuation |
| Use of proceeds | Buying the business (goodwill, equipment, inventory, real estate), eligible closing costs, working capital, refinancing certain existing business debt; not for the buyer’s personal expenses |
The process and timeline
- Get pre-qualified with an SBA-preferred (PLP) lender before you go deep on a target. PLP lenders can approve SBA loans in-house, which is faster than lenders that send loans to the SBA for review.
- Identify and put a target under LOI. The lender will want to see the LOI, the target’s financials, and your background.
- Full application and underwriting. The lender underwrites the business’s cash flow (DSCR), the structure, your experience, the price, and the collateral. They’ll order an independent business valuation if the deal is above the threshold.
- Commitment and conditions. The lender issues a commitment letter with conditions (the valuation supporting the price, the standby seller note documented properly, your equity injection sourced and seasoned, etc.).
- Closing. The loan closes alongside the purchase agreement; the SBA guaranty fee is financed in; the personal guaranty and any real-estate lien are recorded; funds flow to the seller.
Realistic timeline: roughly 45-90 days from application to funding with a PLP lender, longer with a non-PLP lender or if there are complications. It runs alongside diligence and the purchase-agreement negotiation, the financing usually isn’t the bottleneck if you started early and have a clean deal.
What disqualifies an SBA acquisition deal
- The business doesn’t cash-flow. If the DSCR is too thin at the price and structure, the lender won’t fund it, re-trade the price.
- An over-market price. A multiple well above sector norms is a red flag; the valuation has to support the price.
- A prohibited industry or a business that fails SBA size standards.
- A buyer with disqualifying issues, recent bankruptcy, unresolved federal debt, criminal history, weak credit, no relevant experience for a complex business.
- An equity injection the buyer can’t source or document, it generally has to be the buyer’s own funds (or a standby seller note), seasoned, with a documented origin.
- A stock-purchase structure (with limited exceptions), SBA acquisition loans generally require an asset purchase.
- Unverifiable target financials, if the tax returns don’t match the P&L, the lender can’t verify the cash flow.
- An ineligible use of proceeds, the loan is for buying and operating the business, not the buyer’s personal expenses or speculative purposes.
- The seller staying on too long or in too much control, the SBA limits how long and in what capacity the seller can remain involved post-close (a transition consulting period is fine; the seller staying as a key owner or controller generally is not).
How to make an SBA acquisition deal work
- Start with a PLP lender early, get pre-qualified before you fall in love with a target.
- Bring relevant experience or a strong management team. SBA lenders want to see you can run the business.
- Have your equity injection seasoned and documented. Don’t scramble for it at the last minute; the source matters.
- Structure a standby seller note to satisfy part of the equity injection and reduce your cash need, and to signal the seller’s confidence. Make sure it’s documented to the SBA’s standby requirements.
- Get a clean, well-priced target. Verifiable financials, no disqualifying issues, a defensible price the valuation will support. See our note on determining a fair acquisition price.
- Plan the transition within SBA limits, a consulting period is fine; the seller staying as a controlling owner is not.
- Model the DSCR yourself first. If it doesn’t cover debt service with cushion after a reasonable owner salary, the deal isn’t financeable, re-trade the price. See our acquisition loan calculator guide.
- Use a transactional M&A attorney to make the loan, the purchase agreement, the seller note, and the standby agreement fit together.
For finding deals, see how to find businesses for sale and how to source acquisition deals; for the searcher’s path generally, entrepreneurship through acquisition. If you’re an owner getting an SBA-financed offer, our free valuation tool tells you whether the price is reasonable, and our broker alternative guide covers the sell-side.
Related: business acquisition loan, acquisition loan rates, acquisition loan calculator, SBA 7(a) loan to buy a business, leveraged buyout for a small business, how to finance a small business acquisition, how to buy a business with little or no money down, how to determine a fair acquisition price.
The Valuation Has to Support It
An over-priced deal won’t pass SBA underwriting
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Start a Confidential Conversation →Frequently asked questions
How does an SBA 7(a) loan to buy a business work?
The SBA guarantees a portion of a loan made by a participating lender, which lets the lender finance the acquisition with as little as ~10% buyer equity. The loan can cover up to roughly 90% of the total project cost; the buyer provides the 10% equity injection (part of which can be a seller note on full standby rather than the buyer’s own cash). Terms: typically a 10-year amortization for a business-only acquisition (up to 25 years with real estate), a variable rate at prime plus a spread (capped, scaled to loan size), an SBA guaranty fee, and a personal guaranty from any 20%+ owner. The business has to cash-flow, the debt-service-coverage ratio must be comfortably above 1.0x, often 1.25x+, after a reasonable owner salary.
How much do I need to put down for an SBA 7(a) business acquisition loan?
At least about 10% of the total project cost. In many cases, part of that 10% can be a seller note on full standby (the seller receives no payments for the loan’s term) rather than the buyer’s own cash, which is lender- and deal-dependent and subject to current SBA requirements. The buyer’s portion of the equity injection generally has to be the buyer’s own funds, not a personal loan, with a documented and seasoned source. Beyond the injection, the buyer also needs working-capital reserves, the 10% is the minimum equity into the deal, not the total cash you should have available.
What are the requirements for an SBA 7(a) acquisition loan?
The target must be a for-profit US business that meets SBA size standards and isn’t in a prohibited industry. The buyer must generally be a US citizen or lawful permanent resident with decent personal credit, relevant management or industry experience, no recent bankruptcies or unresolved federal debts, and no disqualifying criminal history. The deal usually must be structured as an asset purchase. The target’s financials must be verifiable (tax returns matching the P&L). An independent business valuation is required above a threshold. And the business must cash-flow, the debt-service-coverage ratio must be comfortably above 1.0x, often 1.25x+, after a reasonable owner salary.
Can I use an SBA loan to buy any business?
No. The business must be for-profit, US-based, meet SBA size standards for its industry, and not be in a prohibited category (passive real estate, lending, speculation, gambling, and certain others are ineligible). The deal generally must be an asset purchase (with limited exceptions). The buyer must qualify (citizenship/residency, credit, relevant experience, no disqualifying issues). And the price must be defensible, an over-market multiple that the required valuation won’t support is a deal-killer. Check eligibility with an SBA-preferred lender early; most lower-middle-market and smaller for-profit businesses in standard industries qualify.
How long does an SBA 7(a) acquisition loan take?
Roughly 45-90 days from application to funding with an SBA-preferred (PLP) lender, who can approve loans in-house. It can take longer with a non-PLP lender (which sends loans to the SBA for review) or if there are complications, an over-priced deal, an equity-injection sourcing issue, a structure problem, a slow valuation. The financing runs alongside due diligence and the purchase-agreement negotiation, so it usually isn’t the bottleneck if you got pre-qualified early and have a clean, well-documented deal. Start the lender conversation before you go deep on a target.
Can the seller help finance an SBA acquisition?
Yes, and it’s common. A seller note for part of the price reduces the buyer’s cash need and signals the seller’s confidence. Importantly, a seller note structured on full standby, the seller receives no payments (principal or interest) for the SBA-required period, can count toward part of the buyer’s required 10% equity injection (lender- and deal-dependent, subject to current SBA SOP requirements). After the standby period, the note amortizes at the negotiated rate. The seller should protect themselves with a security interest and acceleration provisions; have a transactional attorney structure the note and the standby agreement to the SBA’s requirements.
What disqualifies a deal from SBA 7(a) financing?
A business that doesn’t cash-flow (a debt-service-coverage ratio too thin at the price and structure); an over-market price the required valuation won’t support; a prohibited industry or a business that fails SBA size standards; a buyer with disqualifying issues (recent bankruptcy, unresolved federal debt, criminal history, weak credit, no relevant experience for a complex business); an equity injection the buyer can’t source or document; a stock-purchase structure (with limited exceptions, asset purchases are required); unverifiable target financials; an ineligible use of proceeds; or the seller staying on too long or in too much control post-close (a transition consulting period is fine; remaining a controlling owner generally is not).
Is an SBA 7(a) loan better than a conventional loan for buying a business?
For most smaller acquisitions (broadly under ~$5M), yes, the SBA 7(a) loan’s lower down payment (~10% vs 20-30%+), longer amortization (10 years vs 5-7), and willingness to lend against goodwill make it the practical choice, even with the SBA guaranty fee and variable rate. A conventional loan can be better for a strong borrower buying a larger or more established business, or for a deal above SBA limits, or when speed matters and the borrower can carry a higher down payment. Get quotes both ways and compare the all-in cost including the SBA guaranty fee, but for first-time and individual buyers, SBA 7(a) is usually the answer.
Related research
- Free Business Valuation Tool, your business is worth in 90 seconds
- The Business Broker Alternative Guide (national pillar)
- Business Brokers by State, with a free alternative
- The Complete Guide to Selling Your Business in 2026
- What’s My Business Worth? Founder’s Valuation Guide
- Who Buys These Companies? Buyer Types Explained
- How to Sell to Private Equity, A Founder’s Walkthrough
- Owner’s Pre-Exit Checklist, 90 Days Before You List
- CT Commentary, Founder & M&A Insights