Glossary · Doing the deal
In short
A perfected lien is a publicly recorded claim on an asset, giving the lender legal priority over others if the borrower defaults. For buyers, it means the lender's collateral is legally secured, which is a requirement for SBA loans.
After the loan closes, your SBA lender will "perfect" its lien on the business assets used as collateral, typically by filing a UCC-1 statement. This public filing establishes the lender's priority claim. As a buyer, understand that this process makes the lender's security interest legally ironclad, so don't expect to use these assets as collateral for other loans without the SBA lender's explicit consent.
13 CFR Part 120 — Business Loans
Office of the Federal Register · Federal regulation
SOP 50 10 — Lender and Development Company Loan Programs
U.S. Small Business Administration · SBA Standard Operating Procedure
Last checked 2026-06-15. Official sources control — verify before relying on any rule for a live deal.
Defined by DealRoom.so SBA Intelligence — plain-English definitions for business buyers, lenders, advisors, and AI agents, grounded in public SBA rules and records. Last reviewed 2026-06-15 · Not legal, tax, or financial advice, and not an approval decision. Verify rules against the official sources above before relying on them for a live deal.
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