7(a) program overview
A plain-English guide to what the SBA 7(a) program offers — loan amounts, maturities, guaranty rates, interest rate caps, fees, and who qualifies. Every number here traces back to the official SBA source.
Official authority
View official SBA.gov pageThe SBA's lender-facing page is the authoritative source for 7(a) terms and eligibility. DealRoom summarizes it; the official source controls.
The 7(a) program covers loans up to $5 million. Most business acquisitions fall between $500K and $3M. Loans of $500K or less qualify for the 7(a) Small Loan program, which has a simplified documentation path.
There is no minimum loan size, but most SBA lenders set their own floors — typically $150K–$350K — because the underwriting cost doesn't scale well below that.
For the full rate and fee picture, see rates & fees in depth →
Maturity depends on the primary use of proceeds:
No prepayment penalty applies on 7(a) loans with a maturity of 15 years or less — so most acquisition loans can be paid off early without a fee.
The SBA guarantees a portion of each 7(a) loan, which is what lets lenders finance deals they couldn't fund conventionally. The guaranty percentage depends on loan size:
The guaranty runs to the lender, not the borrower — it means the lender recovers up to 75–85% of the outstanding balance if the loan defaults. The borrower still owes the full amount and is personally liable under the personal guaranty.
SBA 7(a) interest rates are variable (typically WSJ Prime + a spread) or fixed. The SBA caps the spread over Prime by loan size. With Prime currently at 6.75%, most acquisition loans price between roughly 9% and 10.5%.
For today's exact rate, visit today's 7(a) rate →. For the full fee and rate schedule, see rates & fees in depth →.
To qualify for a 7(a) loan the business and the people behind it must meet a set of SBA requirements. The hard lines are:
For a deeper eligibility walkthrough, see who qualifies for a 7(a) →.
The SBA's 7(a) terms and conditions page is a summary reference, not a regulation. It reflects the program rules at the time DealRoom last checked it (2026-06-13). The binding authorities are 13 CFR Part 120 and SOP 50 10. See the full source guide for this page →
DealRoom is not the SBA
This page summarizes the SBA's 7(a) terms and eligibility for informational purposes only. DealRoom is not the SBA and is not affiliated with any government agency. Rules change — always verify against the current official SBA source before relying on any rule for a live deal. This is not legal, tax, or financial advice, and is not an approval decision.
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