SBA Loan vs Seller Financing

Two of the most common ways to fund a small-business purchase are an SBA loan and seller financing. They're not mutually exclusive — the strongest deals often use both — but they behave very differently on cost, speed, qualification, and risk. Here's a clear comparison to help you decide.

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What each one is

An SBA loan (most commonly the 7(a) program in the U.S.) is a bank loan partially guaranteed by the Small Business Administration, which lets banks lend to acquisitions they'd otherwise consider too risky. Seller financing is when the seller themselves carries part of the price as a promissory note you repay over time from the business's cash flow. See the full seller financing guide for structures.

Side-by-side comparison

FactorSBA 7(a) LoanSeller Financing
Down paymentTypically ~10% (can include equity from seller note)Negotiable — sometimes 0–20%
Funding sourceBank, SBA-guaranteedThe seller
Speed to closeSlower — 60–90+ days, heavy paperworkFaster — driven by the two parties
QualificationCredit, collateral, experience, business cash flowSeller's confidence in you and the business
Interest rateMarket rate, often variableNegotiated — frequently 6–9%
TermUp to 10 years (longer with real estate)Negotiated, commonly 3–7 years
Personal guaranteeAlmost always requiredCommon, negotiable
FlexibilityRigid program rulesHighly flexible terms

Strengths and weaknesses

SBA loan

Pros: can fund a large share of the price, long repayment terms, and lower down payment than a conventional loan. Cons: slow, paperwork-heavy, strict qualification, personal guarantee, and a lien on business (and sometimes personal) assets.

Seller financing

Pros: fast, flexible, signals seller confidence, often no bank involved, and tax-advantaged for the seller. Cons: sellers rarely finance 100%, terms depend entirely on the relationship, and the seller may retain a security interest in the assets.

Why the best deals combine both

SBA lenders often want to see a seller note — it keeps the seller invested in the transition and can count toward the buyer's equity injection. A typical hybrid stack: an SBA loan covers the bulk of the price, a seller note covers a meaningful slice (sometimes on standby behind the SBA debt), and the buyer's cash covers the remainder. Layer in asset-based funding and an earnout, and the buyer's out-of-pocket can shrink dramatically.

Which should you use?

Model any combination in the deal calculator to see your true cash needed at closing before you commit to a financing path.

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