SBA 7(a) loans help finance business acquisitions including
goodwill, equipment, inventory, working capital, and acquisition costs.
SBA 7(a) loans may be used to finance the purchase of an existing business, including complete or partial changes of ownership, business assets, goodwill, equipment, inventory, working capital, and eligible closing costs.
Standard 7(a) loans are generally used for larger acquisition loans from $350,001 up to $5 million.
Loans of $350,000 or less may be processed under the SBA 7(a) Small Loan program.
The maximum SBA 7(a) loan amount is generally $5 million.
For most standard 7(a) loans over $150,000, the SBA guarantee is generally up to 75%. For loans of $150,000 or less, the guarantee may be up to 85%. SBA Express loans have a lower guarantee, and certain export-related programs may have different guarantee levels.
SBA 7(a) interest rates are negotiated between the borrower and lender, but they cannot exceed SBA maximums. For variable-rate loans over $350,000, the maximum rate is generally the base rate plus 3.0%. As of July 1, 2026, the Wall Street Journal Prime Rate is approximately 6.75%, making the current maximum variable rate for many larger 7(a) loans approximately 9.75%, subject to lender pricing and SBA rules.
SBA guaranty fees, lender packaging fees, legal fees, appraisal fees, business valuation fees, and servicing-related costs may apply. SBA fees vary by fiscal year, loan size, loan type, and SBA policy.
SBA 7(a) acquisition loans are generally amortized up to 10 years for business acquisition, goodwill, working capital, and equipment, unless a longer equipment useful life applies. If owner-occupied commercial real estate is included, the real estate portion may be financed up to 25 years.
Most SBA 7(a) term loans are repaid monthly with principal and interest from the cash flow of the business. Payments may be fixed if the loan has a fixed rate. Variable-rate loans may adjust when the rate changes.
The business must generally be an operating, for-profit small business located in the United States, be eligible under SBA rules, demonstrate repayment ability, and meet SBA size standards.
SBA does not publish a universal required credit score or fixed experience requirement. However, lenders typically evaluate the buyer’s credit history, management experience, industry experience, liquidity, personal financial strength, and ability to operate the business successfully.
For a complete change of ownership, current SBA rules generally require a minimum 10% equity injection based on total project costs. A seller note may count toward part of this required equity only if it is on full standby for the life of the SBA loan and does not exceed 50% of the required equity injection. In practical terms, many business acquisition loans require at least 5% buyer cash plus a 5% fully standby seller note, or 10% buyer cash, depending on lender approval and deal structure.
Utilize Sterling Business Capital to identify SBA lenders that are interested in the specific acquisition, industry, buyer profile, and transaction structure.
Required documents commonly include SBA Form 1919, SBA Form 413 Personal Financial Statement, buyer resume, personal tax returns, business tax returns, interim financial statements, purchase agreement or LOI, business valuation, debt schedule, lease or real estate information, projections, and lender-specific underwriting documents.
SBA 7(a) Acquisition Loans remain one of the most effective financing tools for purchasing an existing business. Current SBA rules allow qualified buyers to finance business acquisitions, including goodwill, with longer repayment terms and lower equity requirements than many conventional loans.
However, current SBA acquisition rules require careful attention to equity injection, seller note standby requirements, lender underwriting, repayment ability, and transaction structure. Sterling Business Capital helps buyers and sellers evaluate SBA financeability, identify the right lender, and structure the acquisition properly from the beginning.