Phone

(408) 436-1900

Email

info@accelvalue.com

Silicon Valley
Orange County
SLO County
San Diego County

Phone

(408)-436-1900

Email

info@accelvalue.com

Silicon Valley
Orange County
SLO County
San Diego County

Phone

(408) 436-1900

Email

info@accelvalue.com

Locations

Silicon Valley, Orange County
SLO County, San Diego County

Locations

Silicon Valley, Orange County, SLO County, San Diego County

Things to Know about terms and conditions for SBA

Top 5 Things to Know about Terms and Conditions for SBA Loans
Business team analyzing charts and data on a tablet and documents.

Top 5 Things to Know about Terms and Conditions for SBA Loans

1. Expected Rates and Terms

SBA loans offer interest rates at a maximum of 2.75% over prime. The rate floats for most loans and adjusts quarterly. You can get up to 10 year terms (amortization) for growth capital and/or business acquisitions. Terms are longer for real estate and certain kinds of equipment. Your loan officer should explain how to adjust and/or blend amortization to get the best loan for your situation.

2. Coverage Ratio

Calculate coverage ratio as the sum of debt payments and estimated taxes due, divided by the EBITDA of the business. Banks are generally satisfied with a debt service coverage ratio of 125%. You could go lower in certain circumstances, e.g., if the bank is hungry and you have a lot of collateral. But plan to hit 125% to make life easier.

3. Collateralization

You don’t need to have 100% collateralization of the loan using your business and personal assets. A coverage ratio over 125% can and should make up for your lack of assets to pledge against the loan. We’ve done deals with service businesses with fewer than $500K of assets on the balance sheet that were able to borrow several million dollars of term debt because of the experience of the borrower and their cash flow coverage. That said, every bank is a bit different in what they can do, and collateral matters more to some than others.

4. Buydowns

Buydowns aren’t an option with SBA loans. The SBA wants you to take it all right away or not at all. Before 2024, a one-hundred percent buyout of the owner is required by SBA, but there are new rules coming out to allow partial sale.

5. Balloons and Earn outs

These creative options would be nice, but neither is allowed in SBA lending. The standard operating procedures can be found here (they’re hefty, so find your bifocals). Here’s a secret: inventive ways around these limitations are found all the time.

We work with many SBA lenders. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us.

Follow Us:

More Posts

Send Us A Message

Section Title

The One KPI Buyers Ask About First — and Why Sellers Rarely Track It

Most owners know their revenue. Fewer know how fragile it is. This blog breaks down the one KPI buyers ask about first — customer concentration — and why it can quietly reshape valuation, financing...

What Buyers Really Mean When They Say “I Need Updated Financials”

For business buyers, updated financials aren’t just a due‑diligence hurdle; they’re confirmation. Learn how fresh numbers confirm value, build buyer confidence, and keep SBA lenders moving instead of...

Old Economy, New Demand: Why HVAC, Distribution & Manufacturing Are Hot Again in 2026

Buyers in 2026 are chasing stability, not hype. Traditional service and industrial businesses are outperforming expectations — and the trend is reshaping how traditional business owners should think...

Why Tax Returns Matter More for Small Businesses Than Larger Companies

For small business owners, tax season is one of the most important moments to shape your future exit. If you’re an owner thinking about selling in the next few years, the decisions you make on this...

The Emotional Dip: What Every Seller Feels Between LOI and Closing

There’s a stretch in every business sale that carries a different kind of weight. It’s the period between LOI and closing when the adrenaline fades and the doubts get louder. Sellers often think...

The 5 Numbers Buyers Judge You On (Before They Even Tour the Business)

Before a buyer ever steps foot in your business, they’re already forming an opinion based on a handful of quiet financial cues. Getting these cues right early gives you leverage, clarity, and momentum...

Why Buyers Pay More for Predictability, Not Potential

Selling a business often brings out a certain kind of optimism — the belief that with the right buyer or a bit more investment, all the untapped potential could finally be realized. But buyers don’t...

The Shop That Said Yes When Everyone Else Said No

Some of the strongest businesses aren’t built on hype or big capital — they’re built through craftsmanship, consistency, and the quiet discipline of showing up when others walk away...

What Business Sellers Must Do Now in 2026

The small‑business market is finally stabilizing — but it’s also becoming more selective. Strong, well‑prepared companies are getting multiple offers, while others are sitting on the sidelines longer...

Things to Know about terms and conditions for SBA