SBA 7(a) vs. 504: Which Owner-Occupied Financing Path Protects Your Business Capital?

If your operating business is leasing space, you are actively building a landlord’s equity instead of your own corporate balance sheet. Purchasing your own industrial warehouse, medical office, or retail storefront is the most definitive wealth-building move an operator can make.

The federal government facilitates this via Small Business Administration (SBA) real estate programs, enabling up to 90% Loan-to-Value (LTV) financing. However, choosing between the versatile SBA 7(a) loan and the structured SBA 504 loan requires clear capital alignment.

Quick Reference: The Structural Divergence

FeatureSBA 7(a) Loan FrameworkSBA 504 Loan Framework
Maximum Loan SizeUp to $5 MillionUp to $5.5 Million (SBA Portion)
Typical Down Payment10%10%
Interest Rate StructureVariable or Fixed (Tied to Prime)Fixed (Tied to 10-year/25-year Treasury)
Structure SplitSingle loan from a senior lenderTwo distinct loans (Bank + CDC)
Best Used ForReal estate mixed with Working CapitalLarge, long-term Real Estate/Equipment

When to Select the SBA 7(a) Pathway

The 7(a) program is the Swiss Army knife of business capital. It is the optimal path if your real estate transaction requires an all-inclusive injection. If you are acquiring an office space but also need $200,000 for new inventory, inventory management systems, or to buy out a competing business partner, the 7(a) wraps these components into a single amortizing note.

When to Select the SBA 504 Pathway

The 504 program is built specifically for structural stability on large asset plays. It splits the debt stack into three distinct tranches:

  • 50% via a conventional first mortgage from a bank/lender like GHC.
  • 40% via a Certified Development Company (CDC) backed by a fixed-rate debenture.
  • 10% equity contribution from you.

Because the 40% CDC portion is locked into long-term, below-market fixed interest rates, the 504 protects your enterprise from fluctuating interest environments over a 25-year horizon.

The Crucial 51% Occupancy Rule

To qualify for either SBA path, your operating business must occupy at least 51% of the total square footage of an existing building (or 60% for ground-up construction). You can legally lease out the remaining 49% to other commercial tenants, allowing their rent checks to effectively subsidize your debt stack.

The Next Step: Ready to stop paying rent and buy your facility? Let our team calculate your debt capacity across both SBA paths.

Apply Now for an Owner-Occupied Capital Evaluation

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