
💼 SBA Loans Explained: How to Buy a Business and the Building 🏢💰
💼 SBA Loans Explained: How to Buy a Business and the Building 🏢💰
🚀 SBA 7(a) vs 504: The Smart Way to Finance Business Acquisitions + Real Estate 🔑
How SBA Loans Finance a Business and Building Together
If you're buying a business, you're not just acquiring cash flow—you’re often stepping into a real estate opportunity as well. The smartest buyers understand how to structure SBA financing to acquire both the business and the building, creating long-term control, stability, and wealth.
This is where Small Business Administration (SBA) loan programs come into play—specifically the SBA 7(a) and SBA 504 structures.
🧠 The Core Strategy: Control the Asset + Control the Location
When a business owns its real estate, you’re stacking two wealth drivers:
·Operating business cash flow
·Real estate appreciation + rental stability
This is why these deals are highly attractive—and why lenders are willing to finance them.
SBA 7(a): Flexible Financing for Business + Real Estate
The SBA 7(a) loan is the most versatile structure in small business lending.
Key Features:
·Can finance:
oBusiness acquisition
oReal estate (if owner-occupied)
oWorking capital
·Loan size: Up to $5 million
·Typical down payment: 10–15%
·Amortization:
oBusiness portion: ~10 years
oReal estate portion: up to 25 years
When to Use It:
·Buying a business where real estate is included
·Need flexibility in structuring the deal
·Want one loan instead of multiple layers
👉 Bottom line: SBA 7(a) is ideal when the business is the primary driver and real estate is part of the package.
SBA 504: Long-Term Real Estate Play
The SBA 504 loan is designed specifically for owner-occupied commercial real estate.
Structure Breakdown:
·50% – Bank loan
·40% – SBA (CDC-backed second lien)
·10% – Borrower equity
Key Benefits:
·Lower down payment (as low as 10%)
·Fixed-rate component on SBA portion
·Long-term stability (20–25 years)
Requirements:
·Must occupy 51%+ of the property
·Typically used for:
oOffice buildings
oIndustrial facilities
oMedical practices
👉 Bottom line: SBA 504 is a real estate-first strategy—ideal when the property is the core asset.
💰 Down Payment Reality
Most buyers are surprised by how accessible these loans are.
Typical Equity Requirements:
·SBA 7(a): 10–15% down
·SBA 504: 10% down (can increase based on risk factors)
Compared to conventional commercial loans (often 25–35% down), SBA programs create a massive leverage advantage.
👉 This is why these deals attract buyers—they lower the barrier to entry while preserving liquidity.
🔥 Why These Deals Attract Buyers
1. Lower Cash Required
Buyers can control both the business and real estate with relatively minimal equity.
2. Built-In Rent Stability
Instead of paying rent to a landlord, you’re paying yourself (or your entity).
3. Exit Flexibility
Future buyers can also use SBA financing—creating a built-in exit strategy.
4. Stronger Loan Approval Odds
Lenders like:
·Stable operating businesses
·Owner-occupied real estate
·Predictable cash flow
👉 These deals check all three boxes.
🧩 Strategic Insight: Structure Beats Rate
Most borrowers focus on interest rates.
Smart borrowers focus on:
·Loan structure
·Cash flow coverage
·Exit strategy
SBA financing allows you to:
·Preserve capital
·Lock in long-term occupancy
·Build equity in two places
📍 Final Thought
If you’re evaluating a business acquisition and there’s real estate involved, don’t treat them separately.
The real opportunity is combining them into one strategic financing structure.
That’s how you:
·Reduce risk
·Increase control
·Maximize long-term returns
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© 2023-2024 Bill Rapp, Medallion Funds LLC, Director of Capital Advisory
