Most people assume you need hundreds of thousands of dollars — or millions — to buy a business. The reality? Thanks to the SBA 7(a) loan program, you can acquire a profitable, cash-flowing business with as little as 10% down. That means a $500,000 business requires roughly $50,000 out of pocket. A $1 million business, roughly $100,000.
This is not a loophole or a gimmick. It is the way the SBA loan program was designed to work — putting business ownership within reach for qualified buyers who have the skills but not necessarily the capital to buy outright.
How the 10% Down Structure Works
When you buy a business using an SBA 7(a) loan, the deal structure typically looks like this:
- You (the buyer) contribute 10% of the total project cost as your equity injection
- The SBA lender finances the remaining 90%
- The SBA guarantees 75–85% of the lender's portion, reducing the bank's risk
The "total project cost" includes not just the purchase price, but also any working capital you are financing, closing costs, and SBA guarantee fees. So your 10% is calculated against the entire package, not just the sale price.
Important distinction: The 10% equity injection is a minimum. Some deals may require more — particularly if the business has thin cash flow, limited collateral, or if the buyer has less experience. But 10% is the floor that the SBA program is designed to support.
A Real-World Example
Let us walk through a concrete deal to see how the numbers work:
Example: Acquiring a Commercial Cleaning Company
Now let us look at the monthly economics:
Monthly Cash Flow Analysis
In this scenario, you invest roughly $81,000 and acquire a business that pays you $130,000 per year while building equity. After the 10-year loan term, you own the business free and clear. That is the power of leveraged acquisition.
Want to see deals like this? SBA Clarity curates them for you.
Browse Active ListingsWhere Does the 10% Come From?
The SBA has specific rules about what qualifies as an equity injection. Not all money is created equal in their eyes.
Accepted Sources
- Personal savings or investments: The gold standard. Cash you have saved or liquidated from investment accounts.
- 401(k) Rollover (ROBS): One of the most powerful and underutilized strategies. You roll your retirement funds into a new C-Corporation that buys the business. No early withdrawal penalty, no tax hit at the time of rollover. It is legal, IRS-approved, and used in thousands of SBA deals every year.
- Gift funds: Money from family members, accompanied by a signed gift letter confirming no repayment is expected.
- Home equity (HELOC): Some lenders accept a HELOC as part of the equity injection since it is secured by a separate asset. Policies vary.
- Seller standby note: The seller agrees to carry a portion of the purchase price as a subordinated note, typically on full standby (no payments) for 24 months. This effectively reduces the amount you need upfront.
Not Accepted
- Unsecured personal loans
- Credit card cash advances
- Borrowed funds with no collateral backing
- Anything that creates a new debt obligation reducing your ability to service the SBA loan
The ROBS strategy: If you have $80,000+ in a 401(k) or IRA and want to buy a business, the Rollover for Business Startups structure may allow you to use those funds as your equity injection — without paying taxes or penalties. It requires proper setup through a specialized ROBS provider, but it is one of the most common funding strategies for SBA acquisitions.
When Lenders Want More Than 10%
While 10% is the standard minimum, there are situations where a lender may require 15–20% or more:
- Thin DSCR: If the business barely covers debt service at 90% financing, the lender may require a larger down payment to reduce the loan amount and improve the coverage ratio
- Limited buyer experience: First-time buyers with no industry experience may be asked to put more skin in the game
- Weaker credit: Credit scores in the 650–680 range may trigger a higher equity requirement
- High-risk industries: Restaurants, bars, and other businesses with historically higher failure rates
- Goodwill-heavy deals: Businesses with little tangible collateral and high goodwill valuations
This is why lender matching matters so much. One bank may require 20% for a deal that another bank will fund at 10%. The difference can be tens of thousands of dollars.
The Role of Seller Financing
Seller financing is one of the most powerful tools in the SBA acquisition toolkit. Here is how it typically works in a 10% down deal:
- The buyer puts 10% down in cash (or equivalent)
- The SBA lender finances 80–85% of the purchase price
- The seller carries a note for the remaining 5–10%, subordinated to the SBA loan
This seller note usually requires full standby for 24 months (no payments for two years) and cannot exceed the amount the SBA lender is comfortable with. But it signals that the seller has confidence in the business — which lenders view favorably.
Negotiation tip: Sellers often agree to carry a note because it helps close the deal and may provide tax advantages through an installment sale. If the seller is unwilling to hold any paper, that can actually be a yellow flag for lenders — it raises the question of why the seller does not have confidence in the business going forward.
Curious where you stand for a 10% down deal?
Get Your Free Readiness ScoreFive Steps to Buying a Business With 10% Down
- Assess your readiness: Know your credit score, available capital, and relevant experience before you start looking. Our free readiness score gives you a candid assessment in two minutes.
- Identify the right business: Focus on businesses with strong cash flow (1.25x+ DSCR), proven operating history, and essential demand. See our guide to the best businesses to buy with an SBA loan.
- Secure your equity injection: Determine your source — savings, ROBS, gifts, or a combination. Have it documented and verifiable.
- Get matched with the right lender: Not all banks lend on all deal types. Finding a lender whose appetite aligns with your specific deal is the single biggest variable in whether you get approved at 10% down or get asked for more.
- Close the deal: Work with your lender, attorney, and CPA to finalize due diligence, complete the loan package, and get to the closing table.
The Bottom Line
Buying a business with 10% down is real, it is legal, and it is happening every day across the country. The SBA 7(a) loan program was specifically designed to make business ownership accessible to qualified buyers who have the talent and drive but not necessarily the deep pockets to buy a business outright.
The keys to success: a strong personal financial profile, the right business, and — critically — the right lender. Get those three elements aligned, and 10% down is not just possible. It is the standard.
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