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Glossary

SBA Guarantee

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Definition

SBA Guarantee is A federal guarantee on a portion of an SBA-eligible loan, reducing lender risk and making the loan available to small businesses that might not qualify conventionally.

SBA guarantee is the federal Small Business Administration’s commitment to repay a portion of an SBA-eligible loan if the borrower defaults. The guarantee makes loans available to small businesses that might not qualify for conventional financing, by reducing the lender’s downside risk.

How the guarantee works

The lender originates the full loan amount and disburses to the borrower. The SBA guarantees a portion (typically 50-85% depending on program and loan size). If the borrower defaults and the lender pursues collection, the SBA pays the lender for the guaranteed portion of any uncollected balance.

Guarantee percentages by program

Program SBA guarantee
SBA 7(a) loans up to $150K 85%
SBA 7(a) loans $150K-$5M 75%
SBA Express (up to $500K) 50%
SBA 504 (debenture portion, ~40% of total) 100% (within the SBA portion)
SBA Microloans (up to $50K) SBA-funded directly to intermediaries

Guarantee fee

SBA charges a one-time guarantee fee for the guarantee, financed into the loan typically:

  • Loans up to $150K: 0% fee
  • $150K to $700K: 3% of guaranteed portion
  • $700K to $1M: 3% of guaranteed portion
  • $1M to $5M: 3.5% of guaranteed portion + 0.25% additional on the portion above $1M

Why the guarantee matters

  • Lenders can lend to applicants who don’t fit conventional underwriting (newer business, sub-prime borderline credit, thin financials)
  • Longer terms available (up to 25 years vs 5-7 conventional)
  • Lower rates than comparable conventional loans (lender risk-adjusted pricing reflects the guarantee)
  • Lower down payment requirements (10% vs 20-30% conventional)

Limitations

  • Personal guarantee required from 20%+ owners regardless of SBA guarantee
  • Slower underwriting (30-90 days for 7a, 60-120 for 504)
  • More documentation than conventional
  • SBA-specific use-of-funds restrictions

What this means in practice

Why borrowers need to understand SBA Guarantee

SBA Guarantee appears in funding documents, application materials, lender disclosures, and ongoing servicing communications. Knowing the term in concept lets you read those documents with comprehension instead of skimming past.

The practical answer to "why does this matter" depends on where you are in the process. Application stage: it affects how the deal is structured. Funding stage: it appears as specific contractual language. Servicing stage: it governs how borrower and lender interact through the term.

The three places this term appears

This term has both a general definition and a lender-specific application. The general definition is what is above. The lender-specific application is what shows up in your particular transaction documents, and that is where the contractual implications live.

Treat the general definition as the starting point and the funding documents as the controlling text. Where the two differ, the documents win.

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 guarantee applications. Each answer is one we have given to a real buyer in the last quarter.

Does the equipment loan get reported to credit bureaus?
Most equipment loans report to business credit bureaus (D&B, Equifax Business, Experian Business). Personal guarantees may or may not report to personal credit bureaus depending on lender practice; this is an important question to ask if maintaining personal credit utilization is important.
How does Section 179 work?
Section 179 lets you deduct up to $1.16 million (2024 limit, indexed annually) of qualifying equipment in the year placed in service, rather than depreciating over 5 to 7 years. Equipment must be placed in service before December 31 of the tax year, used more than 50 percent for business, and financed through a qualifying structure (loan or EFA, not operating lease).
What is a balloon payment?
A balloon payment is a large final payment at the end of a loan term that is not fully amortized through monthly payments. Common on shorter terms with longer-life equipment. Borrowers either refinance the balloon at end of term, pay it cash, or include it in budgeting from day one. Most equipment loans amortize fully without balloons.
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.
Can I get a tax deduction on a leased equipment?
Yes. Operating lease payments deduct fully as business expense in the year paid. Capital lease (EFA $1 buyout) structures get depreciation treatment, which often allows Section 179 immediate expensing. Talk to your tax preparer about the specific structure before signing.
How do I know which program tier 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 approve your application against the program tier that fits based on these factors; the soft-pull pre-qualification surfaces this without affecting your score.

How we structure financing

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 have a signed customer contract that the equipment will fulfill
Then Include the contract in the application. Contract-backed equipment finance typically prices 50 to 150 basis points better than capacity-build financing on equivalent credit.
If Your equipment will be operated by a hired driver or operator
Then Document the operator certification status in advance. Some lenders require proof of OSHA training, CDL, or industry-specific certification before funding on certain equipment categories.
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.
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 plan to keep the equipment past the financing term
Then Use a loan or $1 buyout EFA structure. Operating lease and FMV lease structures cost more on a keep-past-term basis because of the residual buyout.

Timeline expectations

What actually happens day-by-day, from application to equipment in service. Most buyers underestimate one or two of these steps; knowing them up front prevents surprises.

Document signing to funding
1 to 3 business days
Lender operations team processes signed docs, files UCC, and funds the seller. Wire transfers funded same-day if processed before cutoff.
Lease end-of-term decision deadline
60 to 90 days before term end
Most lease structures require notice of intent (purchase, return, or renew) 60-90 days before term end. Missing the deadline can trigger automatic renewal or other default consequences.
Full financing review on complex deals
5 to 10 business days
Larger transactions ($500K+) or specialty deals (medical imaging, aerospace, mining) often require deeper review. Plan funding date 2-3 weeks out for these.
UCC-1 filing and search
Filing: same-day. Search: 1-2 business days
UCC-1 financing statement files electronically same-day in most states. Pre-funding UCC search to confirm no existing liens runs 1-2 business days.
Soft-pull pre-qualification turnaround
1 to 4 hours during business hours
Soft-pull pre-qualification surfaces program-tier matches and indicative rates within hours, without affecting credit score.
Placed-in-service date documentation
Same-day as commissioning
For Section 179 and depreciation purposes, the placed-in-service date is when the equipment is delivered, installed, and operationally ready. Document this date carefully for tax purposes.

Authoritative sources

The rate ranges, structures, and program details on this page are informed by our internal financing book and the public industry resources below. We link out so you can verify any specific claim or go deeper.

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Reviewed by

Ed Stapleton Jr.

Founder & Editor

Ed Stapleton Jr. is a serial entrepreneur who has started or acquired over a dozen businesses. He founded Fund My Equipment as the resource he wished he had along the way.

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