Where SBA 504 shows up in the financing process
Most disputes between borrowers and lenders post-funding trace back to a term the borrower thought they understood but had not seen applied in their specific transaction. SBA 504 is one of the concepts that surfaces often enough to be worth understanding in advance.
The general definition above is broadly accurate. The lender-specific application is where the variation shows up. When the term appears in your funding documents, treat the documents as the source of truth and read carefully.
Common context where this comes up
The term shows up in three places in most equipment financing transactions. First, at the application stage, where the lender uses the concept to assess the deal. Second, in the funding documents, where it appears as a specific provision tied to the lender obligations or the borrower obligations. Third, at term end or in the event of restructure or refinance, where the term governs how the deal unwinds.
Knowing where the term shows up in your specific paperwork is the practical step that protects you. The funding documents are the source of truth: application materials and verbal conversations with the lender do not override what the signed documents say.
Where borrowers commonly get this wrong
Borrowers most often misread this term by treating it as boilerplate that follows market convention. In practice, lender-specific application varies enough that two transactions with the same labeled provision can produce different outcomes. Read your specific document language; do not assume convention.
Quick answers
Direct answers to the questions we hear most on sba 504 applications. Each answer is one we have given to a real buyer in the last quarter.
How is interest calculated on equipment loans?
Most equipment loans use simple interest amortization. Each payment includes principal and interest portions, with the interest portion declining as the balance amortizes. EFA structures may use rate-factor pricing instead of stated APR; the dollar cost is similar but the math is different.
What is the typical APR on equipment financing?
Standard prime credit equipment financing runs 7 to 11 percent APR depending on equipment type, term length, and lender. Mid-tier credit runs 9 to 13 percent. Specialty programs for credit-challenged or startup borrowers run 12 to 18 percent. Manufacturer captive promotional financing can run 0 to 6 percent.
Can I finance equipment with no time in business?
Yes, through startup-specific programs. These require strong principal credit (typically 700+ FICO), verifiable industry experience, and larger down payments (15 to 25 percent). New-authority trucking, first-time shop owners, and new medical practices all have dedicated startup programs.
Is equipment financing tax deductible?
The interest portion of equipment loan payments is deductible as a business expense. The equipment itself qualifies for depreciation or Section 179 immediate expensing if eligible. Lease payments on true operating leases deduct fully as business expense. Capital lease structures (EFA $1 buyout) get depreciation treatment.
How do I know which lender program fits my situation?
The fit comes from matching credit profile (FICO + business credit), time in business, equipment type, structure preference (loan vs lease), and tax position. We route applications to the program that fits based on these factors; the soft-pull pre-qualification surfaces which programs accept the application without affecting score.
What is the difference between a captive lender and a bank?
Captive lenders are manufacturer finance arms (CAT Financial, John Deere Financial, etc.) that finance their own equipment. They often offer promotional rates and longer terms. Banks finance any equipment but typically at standard market rates with more conservative underwriting and longer approval cycles.
How we route the decision
The financing structure that fits depends on the actual situation. Below are the most common decision branches we walk through with buyers, in plain "if X, then Y" form.
- If You are planning a Section 179 election close to year-end
- Then Confirm placed-in-service date can be hit before December 31. Equipment ordered but not delivered/commissioned does not qualify for current-year §179, regardless of payment status.
- If You are buying used equipment over 7 years old
- Then Plan for shorter financing terms (36 to 48 months instead of 60 to 72) and higher rates. Authorized refurbished equipment from OEM-direct programs sometimes qualifies for new-equivalent terms.
- If You plan to bundle attachments with the base equipment
- Then Get them all on a single bill of sale and single paper. Bundled financing typically costs 50 to 100 basis points less than financing the base unit and adding attachments separately.
- If You are buying equipment from a private seller
- Then Use a title services provider or escrow for the title transfer. The lender will not fund until title is clear; an escrow arrangement protects both buyer and seller during the title transfer window.
- If You will operate the equipment more than 50 percent for business
- Then You qualify for Section 179 and bonus depreciation on the business-use percentage. Below 50 percent business use disqualifies from §179 entirely.
What if something changes mid-term
Equipment loans run for 36 to 96 months. Things change. The patterns below cover the situations that come up most often during the loan term and how they typically resolve.
Lender becomes difficult to work with
Most equipment loans are assumable or assignable with lender consent. Refinancing to a different lender is the more common path. Document the issues clearly; the situation rarely improves and the alternatives exist.
Equipment damage during the loan term
Insurance proceeds pay off the loan balance or fund replacement equipment with lender consent. The loan does not cancel automatically with the equipment loss; coordination with lender is required.
Business ownership change during loan term
Most equipment loans are personally guaranteed and assumable with lender consent during ownership change. The new owner submits an application similar to the original; the lender reviews and either consents or requires payoff.
Equipment used for something different from original purpose
Loan covenants sometimes restrict equipment use (no sub-rental, no out-of-state operation, etc.). Changing use materially without consent can trigger default. Request lender consent in writing before the change.
Authoritative sources
The rate ranges, structures, and program details on this page are informed by our partner-lender book and the public industry resources below. We link out so you can verify any specific claim or go deeper.