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SBA-Guaranteed Business FinancingSBA 7(a) loans that fit how your business actually grows
The SBA's most flexible program — one loan that can buy a business, finance owner-occupied real estate, fund working capital, or refinance expensive debt, with low down payments and longer terms than a conventional bank line.
The SBA 7(a) is the federal government's most flexible small-business loan, covering up to $5 million for business acquisition, owner-occupied real estate, partner buyouts, working capital, equipment, and debt refinance. North Bay Capital shops the deal across SBA-preferred lenders to match your use of funds with the right structure and rate.
Programs we broker
The options under sba 7(a) loans — and the right fit for each.
SBA 7(a) Standard Loan
The flagship SBA loan, up to $5 million, for almost any legitimate business use
The Standard 7(a) is the program most people mean when they say 'SBA loan.' It is the SBA's flagship offering — a government-guaranteed loan from a private lender that can fund business acquisition, owner-occupied real estate, working capital, equipment, debt refinance, or any combination of those uses in a single loan. The maximum loan amount is $5 million.
Because the SBA guarantees a large portion of the loan to the lender (currently up to 85% on amounts at or below $150,000 and up to 75% on larger amounts), banks can approve deals that would fail conventional underwriting on collateral or down-payment alone. As a brokerage we take the same package to multiple SBA-preferred lenders so you see real terms, not just the first one offered.
- Combining real estate, equipment, and working capital in one loan
- Borrowers who want maximum flexibility on use of funds
- Deals that need a long amortization with no balloon
- Owners exiting the conventional commercial market
SBA 7(a) Express Loan
Faster turn time and lighter paperwork, up to $500,000
SBA Express is a streamlined version of the 7(a) program built for smaller, time-sensitive needs. The maximum loan amount is $500,000, and the SBA commits to a 36-hour response to the lender on the loan application, which generally translates into a faster overall closing than a Standard 7(a). The trade-off is a lower SBA guaranty — typically 50% — which means the lender takes on more risk and tends to apply tighter credit standards.
Express is a good fit when the numbers are modest, the use of funds is clean, and time matters more than squeezing the absolute lowest rate. It is commonly used for working-capital lines, smaller equipment purchases, and tenant-improvement buildouts. We will tell you honestly when an Express makes sense versus pushing the file into a Standard 7(a).
- Working-capital lines of credit
- Smaller equipment or vehicle purchases
- Tenant-improvement buildouts
- Time-sensitive expansion capital
SBA 7(a) Business Acquisition & Partner Buyout Loan
Buy the business — or buy out your partner — with as little as 10% down
Acquiring an established, profitable business is one of the most common reasons borrowers use the 7(a). Because the loan is repaid from the cash flow of the business you are buying, lenders can look past the limited collateral that usually blocks a conventional acquisition loan. A change-of-ownership 7(a) generally requires a minimum 10% equity injection, and in some cases a portion of that can come from a seller note placed on full standby.
Partner buyouts work the same way. If you are taking full control by buying out a departing owner, a 7(a) can fund the share purchase without draining the company's operating cash. We help you structure the business valuation, seller financing, and equity injection so the file clears SBA underwriting the first time.
- Buying an established, profitable business
- Buying out a departing partner
- First-time buyers with relevant industry experience
- Acquisitions that are light on hard collateral
SBA 7(a) Owner-Occupied Real Estate Loan
Own your building instead of renting it, with up to 25-year amortization
If your business occupies at least 51% of an existing property (or 60% at occupancy and 80% over time for new construction), the 7(a) can finance the purchase, construction, or improvement of that real estate with a 25-year amortization. Stretching the payback over 25 years — versus 10 years on most other 7(a) uses — is what makes owning your space competitive with leasing it.
Down payments commonly land near 10%, well below the 25% to 35% a conventional commercial mortgage often demands. When the deal is primarily real estate, I will run a side-by-side with an SBA 504 — that program often delivers a long fixed rate that beats the 7(a) on real-estate-only deals, and you deserve to see both before you sign.
- Buying the building you operate from
- Ground-up or expansion construction
- Combining real estate with equipment or working capital
- Replacing rent with equity
SBA 7(a) Working Capital Loan
Long-term working capital that does not balloon or strangle cash flow
When the need is operating cash rather than a hard asset, a 7(a) can supply working capital for inventory, payroll, marketing, hiring, and day-to-day expansion, generally amortized up to 10 years. That long payback is the real advantage over a short-term loan, an MCA, or a one-year line — it keeps the monthly payment low enough that the business can actually grow into the debt.
Working-capital 7(a) loans can be structured as a term loan or, in some cases, as a CAPLines facility for businesses with cyclical or contract-driven cash flow. We size the loan against trailing and projected cash flow so the debt-service-coverage works on day one and stays workable in a slower quarter.
- Inventory and payroll for a growth push
- Funding a new location buildout
- Smoothing seasonal or contract-driven cash flow
- Replacing expensive short-term debt with longer terms
SBA 7(a) Equipment Loan
Finance machinery and equipment with terms that match useful life
The 7(a) finances equipment, machinery, vehicles, and fixtures with the loan term tied to the useful life of the asset, generally up to 10 years. That matters: matching the term to the life of the equipment keeps the payment in line with the revenue the asset will generate, and avoids the cash crunch you get when a five-year balloon comes due on a ten-year machine.
For mixed projects — equipment plus working capital, or equipment plus a building — a single 7(a) can cover everything in one closing. For very large equipment-and-real-estate deals at a fixed rate, I will also show you how an SBA 504 compares before you commit.
- Buying production or shop machinery
- Adding fleet vehicles or trucks
- Upgrading restaurant or commercial kitchen equipment
- Technology, point-of-sale, or fixture buildouts
SBA 7(a) Debt Refinance Loan
Replace high-rate or balloon business debt with one longer-term payment
Plenty of businesses carry debt that is choking cash flow — merchant cash advances, short-term online loans, credit-card balances used as working capital, or a commercial mortgage with a balloon coming due. A 7(a) can refinance qualifying business debt into one longer-amortizing loan, and the typical result is a meaningfully lower monthly payment.
The catch is the SBA benefit tests. The debt being refinanced generally must have been used for legitimate business purposes, cannot be on unreasonable terms, and the new payment usually has to deliver a measurable cash-flow improvement (commonly at least a 10% reduction in payment, though the exact rule depends on the scenario). I review your existing notes before we file anything so we know upfront whether the deal clears those tests.
- Paying off merchant cash advances
- Refinancing a commercial mortgage balloon
- Consolidating multiple business loans
- Lowering debt service to free up cash for growth
Calculators for this loan
What people ask before they apply
What can an SBA 7(a) loan be used for?
The 7(a) is the SBA's most flexible program. Proceeds can go toward buying an existing business, buying out a partner, purchasing or improving owner-occupied commercial real estate, working capital, equipment, furniture and fixtures, and refinancing qualifying business debt. Startups can also qualify with a strong business plan and adequate equity injection. That breadth is the main reason borrowers choose it over a narrower loan.
How much can I borrow with an SBA 7(a) loan?
The maximum 7(a) loan amount is $5 million. The actual amount you qualify for depends on the cash flow of the business, the use of funds, available collateral, and your equity injection. Because North Bay Capital is a brokerage, we can take the same file to multiple SBA-preferred lenders to find the one most comfortable with your loan size and industry.
How much do I have to put down on an SBA 7(a) loan?
Down payments are often around 10%, which is the typical minimum equity injection for a business acquisition or change of ownership. That is well below the 25% to 35% many conventional commercial loans require. The exact figure depends on the deal, and in some cases part of the injection can come from seller financing on standby. Verify the requirement for your specific scenario.
What are the interest rates and terms on a 7(a) loan?
Rates can be variable or fixed and are tied to a base rate, most commonly the Prime Rate, plus a lender spread that the SBA caps by loan size. Terms run up to 25 years for real estate and generally up to 10 years for working capital, equipment, and most other uses. Loans fully amortize with no balloon, so your payment does not reset at the end of the term.
Is a personal guarantee required for an SBA 7(a) loan?
Yes. The SBA requires a personal guarantee from anyone who owns 20% or more of the business. The 7(a) also relies on an SBA guaranty to the lender — the government backs a large share of the loan, up to 85% on smaller amounts and up to 75% on larger ones — which is what lets lenders approve deals that conventional underwriting would decline.
What is the difference between an SBA 7(a) and an SBA 504 loan?
The 7(a) is the flexible, all-purpose program — it can fund acquisitions, working capital, equipment, real estate, and debt refinance, usually at a variable rate tied to Prime. The 504 is narrower and built specifically for owner-occupied real estate and major equipment, often delivering a long-term fixed rate through a two-loan structure with a Certified Development Company. If your need is purely real estate or heavy equipment and you want a fixed rate, the 504 is often worth comparing. We run both side by side.
Can I use a 7(a) loan to buy commercial real estate?
Yes, as long as your business will occupy at least 51% of an existing building (more for new construction). The 7(a) can finance the purchase, construction, or improvement of that property and amortize it over up to 25 years. For a real-estate-only purchase where you want a fixed rate, we will also show you how an SBA 504 compares before you commit.
How long does it take to close an SBA 7(a) loan?
Timelines vary by lender and by how clean the file is, but many 7(a) loans close in roughly 45 to 90 days. The biggest delays come from incomplete financials, business valuations, or appraisals. We front-load document collection and work with SBA-preferred lenders to keep the process moving. Call us early and we will give you a realistic timeline for your deal.
Jesse Gonzalez, President & Founder
NMLS #278103 · CA DRE #01855372 · Last reviewed June 24, 2026
Talk through your SBA 7(a) scenario with a real person
Whether you are buying a business, your building, or refinancing costly debt, the right structure depends on the details. Call Jesse Gonzalez at North Bay Capital at 707-595-5393, or email jesse@northbaycap.com. We will tell you honestly whether a 7(a), a 504, or another path fits best — and shop it across lenders to find your terms.