SBA 7(a) vs SBA 504 Loan: Which Is Right for Your Business in 2026?
The SBA offers two main loan programs for small business capital: the flexible 7(a) and the real-estate-focused 504. Choosing the wrong one costs you tens of thousands in interest. Here's how they compare based on current SBA program terms.
SBA 7(a): The Flexible Option
Maximum loan amount: $5,000,000. Uses: working capital, equipment, real estate, acquisitions, refinancing. Interest rate: prime + 2.75% to 4.75% depending on loan size and term. At prime 8.50% (Q1 2026): 7(a) rates run 11.25–13.25%. Term: up to 10 years for working capital, 25 years for real estate. Down payment: 10–20%. Collateral: required where available, not a disqualifier if lacking. SBA guarantee: 75–85% of loan amount. Processing time: 2–3 weeks via Preferred Lender Program.
SBA 504: The Real Estate and Equipment Loan
Maximum loan amount: no formal cap, but CDC/SBA portion is $5.5M ($5M standard, $5.5M for manufacturing or energy). Uses: owner-occupied real estate (51%+ occupied by borrower) and major fixed equipment only—not working capital or inventory. Structure: 50% bank + 40% CDC/SBA debenture + 10% borrower equity. SBA 504 debenture rate (Q1 2026): approximately 6.1–6.4% (5-year Treasury + 0.38%). Term: 10 or 20 years. Processing time: 45–90 days.
When to Use 7(a)
Use SBA 7(a) when you need working capital, when you're buying a business or franchise, when you need multiple-use financing (equipment + inventory + cash), or when you want faster processing. The 7(a) is the workhorse: 57,362 loans totaling $27.5B approved in FY 2025 (SBA data). Express line of credit up to $500,000 available with 36-hour turnaround.
When to Use 504
Use SBA 504 when you're buying owner-occupied commercial real estate or making a large fixed-asset equipment purchase. The 504's below-market fixed rate and 20-year term generate substantial long-term savings versus a 7(a). Example: $1M building purchase. 7(a) at 13%: $10,871/month. 504 at 6.2%: $5,886/month on the SBA portion. Savings: ~$5,000/month. The 10% down payment also preserves more working capital.
Head-to-Head Summary
For working capital or acquisitions: 7(a) wins. For real estate or large equipment (20-year hold): 504 wins significantly on rate. For mixed needs: often two separate loans (7(a) for operating capital + 504 for real estate). Sources: SBA.gov program circulars, SBA FY 2025 annual report, Federal Reserve prime rate Q1 2026.