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Funding Method

SBA Loans

The most common franchise loan — bank-issued, partially SBA-guaranteed, for directory-listed brands.

The SBA 7(a) program is the path most people mean when they say they are 'getting a loan' for a franchise. The loan itself comes from a bank or SBA-preferred lender; the Small Business Administration guarantees a portion, which lowers the lender's risk and makes longer terms and competitive rates possible for a first-time business owner.

How it works

You apply through an SBA lender, not the SBA directly. The lender underwrites you on credit, experience, the business projections, and collateral, then issues the loan with an SBA guarantee on part of the balance. Expect a down payment (commonly a meaningful percentage of the total project), a personal guarantee, and often a lien on available collateral. For franchises specifically, the brand generally needs to appear on the SBA Franchise Directory for the deal to qualify.

Who it tends to fit

It tends to fit buyers with solid personal credit, some liquid capital for the down payment, and a clean financial history, who want to preserve cash by financing the bulk of the investment over a long term. It is less of a fit if you cannot cover the down payment or want zero personal liability.

What to watch for

Underwriting takes time — weeks, sometimes longer — so start early. The brand must be SBA-eligible; confirm its current directory status (the rules and process have changed in recent years). The personal guarantee means your personal assets are on the line. And SBA eligibility for you personally is never guaranteed — it depends on your full financial picture.

Common Questions

Questions about sba loans

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