SBA 7a Loans

When you are ready to apply for an SBA 7a loan or an SBA 504 loan, please click on the link that will take you back to our home page.  You begin the application process by entering your contact information.  Then you can submit your SBA 7a loan request or your SBA 504 loan request to over 100 different SBA lenders.


The Small Business Administration (SBA) does not actually make small business loans.  Instead, the SBA merely guarantees up to 90% of the principal of certain business loans made by banks and other specialized SBA lenders.  Two of the most popular SBA loan programs are the SBA 7a program and the CDC/504 program.

Under the SBA 7(a) program, an SBA lender will make a commercial real estate loan that is fully-amortized over 20 or 25 years.  Right off the bat, this is a very attractive program because most conventional commercial real estate loans have a loan term of only five to ten years.  This means the conventional borrower has to pay new loan fees and new third party report fees every five to ten years. 

The SBA will then guarantee up to 90% of this small business loan for the bank, and the bank will typically be able to sell the loan off in the secondary market at a handsome premium - often five to seven percent of the loan amount.  A loan or a bond sells for a premium when it fetches more than the face amount of the debt, usually because the interest rate is higher than the market.

SBA 7(a) loans are written as adjustable mortgage loans tied to prime.  The spreads will vary from a low of 1.5% over prime to a maximum of 2.75% over prime.  The loan fee depends on the size of the loan and the type of collateral (equipment versus commercial real estate), but the fees usually run between 2 and 3 points. 

Small business owners can borrow between $50,000 and $5 million using the SBA 7(a) program.

The really big advantage of the SBA 7(a) program is that the owners of existing small businesses can often get loans up to 90% of the purchase price in order to buy commercial real estate for their businesses.  Commercial real estate loans up to 90% loan-to-value are pretty terrific today, especially when you consider that many conventional commercial real estate lenders have cut their loan-to-value ratios down from 80% to just 58% to 65%.

In order to qualify for an SBA 7(a) loan, the business owner must occupy, or intend to occupy, at least 51% of the commercial real estate being purchased.  The commercial real estate cannot have a residential component.  For example, if the target property consisted of an old home and a large warehouse, it probably could NOT be financed using SBA financing.

SBA 7(a) loans must be fully-collateralized.  In other words, the SBA lender is likely to blanket all of the borrower's inventory, receivables and equipment.  This makes it difficult for the business to obtain a business line of credit from a bank.  In addition, the SBA lender will usually blanket the personal residence of the borrower. 

Borrowers can also obtain SBA 7(a) loans for working capital, to purchase equipment or to acquire businesses or franchises.  The required downpayments, however, are larger.  Start-up borrowers will usually be required to put at least 20% down.  More often they will be required to put 30% down.
When you are ready to apply for an SBA 7a loan or an SBA 504 loan, please click on the link that will take you back to our home page.  You begin the application process by entering your contact information.  Then you can submit your SBA 7a loan request or your SBA 504 loan request to over 100 different SBA lenders.