SBA-backed loans are the most accessible form of long-term business financing for US small businesses. Here is how each program works.
A bakery owner in Nashville needed $180,000 to expand into a second location. Her bank declined twice — the business was profitable but lacked the collateral for a conventional loan. Her SBA lender approved an SBA 7(a) loan within six weeks. The loan didn't come from the SBA directly. It came from her bank, with the federal government guaranteeing a portion of the risk. That guarantee is the mechanism that makes SBA lending work — and it's why hundreds of thousands of small businesses access capital through these programs every year.
The U.S. Small Business Administration sets guidelines for loans and reduces lender risk by guaranteeing a portion of the loan amount. SBA-approved lenders — banks, credit unions, and community development companies — originate and service the loans. The SBA's guarantee means lenders can approve businesses they would otherwise decline, making it one of the most important sources of small business capital in the United States.
There are three primary loan programs most relevant to small business owners:
The 7(a) loan program is the SBA's primary and most widely used financing vehicle. It can be used for working capital, equipment, inventory, real estate, business acquisition, and debt refinancing — making it the most versatile option for most business needs.
Key details:
To qualify, your business must operate for profit, be based in the United States, meet SBA size standards for your industry, demonstrate that you've used other financing options first, and have a sound business purpose. The lender applies its own underwriting criteria on top of the SBA's baseline requirements — so meeting SBA eligibility doesn't guarantee approval.
Applications go through SBA-approved lenders. Use the SBA's Lender Match tool at lendermatch.sba.gov to find lenders in your area that offer the specific 7(a) program variant suited to your needs. The standard turnaround for a 7(a) loan is 60 to 90 days from application to funding, though SBA Express loans (up to $500,000) can close faster.
The 504 program is specifically designed for long-term financing of commercial real estate and major equipment. Unlike 7(a), which is delivered through a single lender, 504 loans involve a three-way structure: a conventional lender provides 50% of the project cost, a Certified Development Company (CDC) provides up to 40% backed by the SBA, and the borrower contributes a minimum of 10%.
Key details:
The 504 program is more complex and time-consuming than 7(a) — the three-party structure requires coordination between your conventional lender and a CDC. Find your local CDC through the SBA's CDC directory at sba.gov/partners/lenders/certified-development-companies.
The Microloan program serves startups, newly established businesses, and entrepreneurs in underserved communities who may not qualify for conventional bank loans or larger SBA programs. Loans are administered through a network of nonprofit intermediary lenders — not conventional banks.
Key details:
Find your local SBA Microloan intermediary at sba.gov/funding-programs/loans/microloans.
One of the most persistent misconceptions in small business finance is that the SBA provides grants for starting or expanding a business. It does not. The SBA provides loans, loan guarantees, and technical assistance. The only SBA grant programs are for scientific research and development (through SBIR/STTR — see note below), certain manufacturing workforce development initiatives, and nonprofits supporting entrepreneurship.
If you see an advertisement promising "free SBA grants for your business," treat it as a scam indicator. The SBA only communicates through official .gov email addresses and does not charge fees to access its programs.
Note on SBIR/STTR: The Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer programs — historically the largest federal grant source for R&D-focused small businesses — had their congressional authorization expire in September 2025. Reauthorization was pending as of early 2026. Monitor the current status at sbir.gov before planning around these programs.
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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or regulatory advice. Programme details, eligibility criteria, and funding amounts change frequently. Always verify current requirements on official government websites or with a qualified advisor before taking action.
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