There is no single SBA 7(a) down payment. What you owe depends on how you use the funds, whether you're buying a business or starting one, and what you bring to the table as equity.
The SBA does not mandate a specific down payment percentage for 7(a) loans. Instead, the SBA requires an equity injection — your stake in the deal — and the amount varies based on loan purpose, business type, and lender policy.
If you're buying a business with an SBA 7(a) loan, expect at least 10% of total project cost. For a $500,000 acquisition: minimum $50,000. Deals with goodwill exceeding tangible assets often push to 15-20%.
Owner-occupied purchases typically require 10-20%. A $1,000,000 property at 15% = $150,000.
The SBA allows up to 100% financing for qualified existing businesses. Startups will face injection requirements.
Startups (under 2 years) face 15%-30% requirements. Review the full SBA qualification requirements.
The 10% applies to total project cost, not just purchase price. Buying for $400,000 + $20,000 closing costs + $30,000 working capital = $450,000 total. Minimum injection: $45,000.
Key takeaway: Calculate equity injection against total project cost. Closing costs, working capital, and fees all increase the denominator — and your required contribution.
The seller finances a portion on full standby for 24 months — zero payments. Typical structure on $600,000:
SBA 7(a) loan amounts, rates, and terms remain competitive in 2026, but the equity injection is where deals stall most often. Start early, know your total project cost, and work with an SBA-preferred lender.
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