SBA loans are the gold standard of small business financing — the lowest rates, longest terms, and largest loan amounts available to most small businesses. The SBA guarantees 75%–85% of each loan, which lets approved lenders offer rates currently running 10.5%–13.25% for 7(a) loans and fixed rates of ~7.5%–9% for 504 loans. Here’s how every SBA program works and how to qualify.
SBA Loan Programs at a Glance (2026)
| Program | Max Amount | Rate Type | Max Term | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SBA 7(a) — Standard | $5 million | Variable (prime + spread) | 25 years | Working capital, real estate, acquisitions |
| SBA 7(a) — Express | $500,000 | Variable | 10 years | Faster decisions (36-hour response) |
| SBA 7(a) — Small Loan | $500,000 | Variable | 10 years | Streamlined for smaller amounts |
| SBA 504 | $5.5 million | Fixed (CDC portion) | 20–25 years | Commercial real estate, heavy equipment |
| SBA Microloan | $50,000 | Fixed (~8%–13%) | 6 years | Startups, underserved entrepreneurs |
| SBA CAPLines | $5 million | Variable | 10 years | Revolving working capital |
| SBA Export Loans | $5 million | Variable | 25 years | Export-focused businesses |
SBA 7(a) Loans — The Most Versatile Program
The SBA 7(a) is the agency’s flagship program, accounting for roughly 70% of all SBA lending. It’s the most flexible loan in the SBA portfolio.
Current 7(a) rates (May 2026): The rate is based on the prime rate plus a lender spread, capped by the SBA:
| Loan Amount | Maturity ≤ 7 Years | Maturity > 7 Years |
|---|---|---|
| $25,000 or less | Prime + 4.25% | Prime + 4.75% |
| $25,001–$50,000 | Prime + 3.25% | Prime + 3.75% |
| $50,001–$250,000 | Prime + 2.25% | Prime + 2.75% |
| Over $250,000 | Prime + 2.0% | Prime + 2.75% |
With the current prime rate at 7.5%, a $300,000 7-year loan carries a maximum rate of 9.5%; a 10-year loan up to 10.25%.
SBA guarantee fee (2026): For loans over $350,000, the SBA charges a guarantee fee of 2%–3.5% of the guaranteed portion. Loans $150,000 or less currently have no guarantee fee.
7(a) eligibility requirements:
- Must be a for-profit business operating in the US
- Must meet SBA size standards (varies by industry — generally under 500 employees for manufacturers; under $8M–$41.5M revenue for service businesses)
- Must have exhausted other financing options first
- Owners with 20%+ ownership must personally guarantee the loan
- Generally 2+ years in business (some lenders go to 1 year)
SBA Express Loans — Faster Approval
SBA Express loans work like 7(a) loans but the SBA guarantees only 50% (vs. 75%–85%), which allows lenders to respond within 36 hours rather than the standard 5–10 business days. Maximum $500,000. Term loans or revolving lines of credit. Rates slightly higher than standard 7(a).
SBA 504 Loans — Best for Real Estate and Equipment
The 504 program finances major fixed assets: owner-occupied commercial real estate (must occupy at least 51% of the space) and heavy equipment with a useful life of 10+ years.
How the 504 structure works:
- 50% — conventional first mortgage from a bank (bank sets its own rate)
- 40% — CDC (Certified Development Company) debenture at a fixed SBA rate (~7.5%–9%)
- 10% — down payment from the borrower (15%–20% for startups or special-use properties)
Why 504 rates are lower: The CDC portion is funded via debentures sold to the public and carries a fixed rate for the life of the loan — 20 or 25 years. This gives businesses a long-term fixed rate that doesn’t float with the prime rate.
504 eligibility:
- Net worth under $20 million AND average net income under $6.5 million after taxes for the past 2 years
- The project must create or retain one job per $90,000 of SBA debenture ($65,000 for manufacturing)
- Property must be owner-occupied (your business uses 51%+)
SBA Microloans — Best for Startups and Underserved Founders
The SBA Microloan program provides up to $50,000 through nonprofit intermediary lenders. Average loan size is approximately $14,000.
Key differences from other SBA programs:
- Disbursed through nonprofit CDFIs and intermediaries — not banks
- More flexible on credit, revenue, and time-in-business
- Many programs specifically target women-owned, minority-owned, veteran-owned, and rural businesses
- Most intermediaries require borrowers to complete free business training before receiving funds
- Cannot be used to pay existing debt or purchase real estate
Where to find SBA microloan lenders: Search the SBA Microloan Intermediaries directory by state.
How to Apply for an SBA Loan
Step 1: Prepare your documents
- 2 years of business tax returns (or YTD financials if under 2 years)
- 2 years of personal tax returns for all 20%+ owners
- 3–6 months of business bank statements
- Business plan with financial projections (required for SBA 504 and microloans)
- Business debt schedule (list all existing loans and payments)
- SBA Form 413 (personal financial statement) for each owner
Step 2: Find an SBA lender
- SBA Preferred Lenders (PLP) have delegated authority to approve loans without SBA review — fastest option
- SBA Express lenders have the 36-hour response guarantee
- Search the SBA Lender Match tool to find lenders in your area
Step 3: Submit and wait Standard 7(a): 5–10 business days for SBA response after the lender submits your complete package. Total time from application to funding: 30–90 days. SBA Express: 36-hour SBA response. Total time: 2–4 weeks.
Best SBA-Approved Lenders in 2026
| Lender | Specialty | Min. Credit | Time to Fund |
|---|---|---|---|
| Live Oak Bank | SBA specialist, tech-forward | 680+ | 30–45 days |
| Huntington Bank | Midwest, 7(a) and 504 | 680+ | 45–90 days |
| Funding Circle | Online SBA, faster process | 660+ | 3–4 weeks |
| Readycap Commercial | 7(a) preferred lender | 680+ | 30–60 days |
| Lendio | Marketplace, matches to 75+ lenders | 600+ | Varies |
| Celtic Bank | SBA preferred lender | 680+ | 30–45 days |
SBA Loan Costs: What to Budget For
Beyond the interest rate, budget for:
- Guarantee fee: 0%–3.5% of the guaranteed amount (waived for loans ≤$150,000 in 2026)
- Origination fee: 0%–3% charged by the lender
- Closing costs: Appraisals, title search, legal fees — common on 504 loans ($3,000–$7,000)
- Packaging fee: Some lenders charge for loan packaging assistance ($1,500–$2,500)
- Annual service fee: 0.55% of outstanding guaranteed balance per year
Total cost example: A $300,000 SBA 7(a) loan at 10.25% for 10 years:
- Monthly payment: ~$3,960
- Total interest paid: ~$175,200
- Guarantee fee (2%): ~$4,500
- Total cost of borrowing: ~$179,700
Related Articles
- SBA 7(a) Loan 2026 — In-Depth Guide to Rates, Terms, and Approval
- How to Get a Business Loan — Step-by-Step Application Guide
- Startup Business Loans — Options for New Businesses
- Bad Credit Business Loans — Best Options Below 640
- Small Business Loans — All Financing Options Compared
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