Last updated: May 2026

Business Finance Education

Commercial Mortgages for Small Business Owners: SBA 504 vs. Conventional vs. SBA 7(a) — What You Need to Know

Owning your business's real estate is one of the best long-term financial decisions an established business owner can make — converting a rent expense into equity-building mortgage payments while controlling your occupancy costs. But commercial mortgage structures are meaningfully different from residential lending, and the choice between SBA 504, SBA 7(a), and conventional commercial mortgages is not obvious. This guide explains the real differences, who qualifies for each, what the cost and term structures look like, and how to think about prepayment before you sign.

  • Owner-occupied vs. investment commercial mortgage — qualification differences
  • SBA 504 structure — why 10% down matters for small businesses
  • LTV ratios, amortization, and balloon payment realities
  • Prepayment penalty structures across loan types

Owner-occupied vs. investment commercial property financing

The first and most important distinction in commercial real estate financing for small businesses is whether you are buying a property your business will occupy or a property you will own as an investment and lease to others. This distinction affects which loan programs you can access, what the underwriting focuses on, and how much down payment you need.

Owner-occupied commercial property means your business occupies at least 51% of the usable square footage. Most small business commercial mortgage programs — including all SBA real estate programs — require owner-occupancy. The SBA programs specifically require that the borrowing business occupy at least 51% (for existing buildings) or 60% (for new construction) of the property. Owner-occupied underwriting combines the business's operating financial strength with the property's collateral value. If the business fails, the lender can look to both the real estate and the owner's personal guarantee for recovery.

Investment commercial property means you own the building and lease it to tenants who are not your operating business. This includes purchasing a small office building to rent to other businesses, buying a strip center, or acquiring a warehouse to lease. Investment commercial underwriting focuses primarily on the property's net operating income (NOI) — the rents minus operating expenses — relative to the debt service. Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) is the primary underwriting metric, typically required to be 1.20x or higher. Investment commercial mortgages are not eligible for SBA programs.

Many small business owners fall into a hybrid situation: they are buying a building that is larger than their business needs, with the intent to occupy part and lease the rest. For SBA purposes, as long as the borrowing business occupies at least 51%, this is eligible as an owner-occupied transaction. The non-occupied portion can be leased to generate additional income, which actually helps debt service coverage.

SBA 504 commercial mortgage: the small business real estate gold standard

The SBA 504 loan program is specifically designed to help small businesses acquire or construct owner-occupied commercial real estate, and it is the most favorable commercial mortgage program available to small businesses that qualify. The structure, terms, and rate mechanics are unlike any other business loan product.

The two-part structure: An SBA 504 project involves two separate financing pieces. The first piece is a conventional first mortgage from a participating bank or credit union, covering approximately 50% of the total project cost. This first mortgage is made on conventional commercial terms and is not SBA-guaranteed. The second piece is a Certified Development Company (CDC) loan covering up to 40% of the project cost, funded by SBA-guaranteed debentures issued by the CDC and sold to investors. The borrower puts in the remaining 10% as a down payment.

For special-purpose properties (gas stations, car washes, hotels, restaurants) or for startup businesses, the borrower's contribution increases to 15% or 20%, and the two lender portions shift accordingly. But for standard owner-occupied commercial real estate purchased by an established business, 10% down is the standard SBA 504 structure.

Rate structure: The CDC/SBA portion of the loan carries a fixed interest rate set at the time of debenture sale — typically a small spread above the 5- or 10-year Treasury rate. These rates are historically very low because the debentures carry an implicit U.S. government guarantee. The conventional first mortgage portion carries market-rate commercial terms set by the bank. The blended effective rate across both portions is typically lower than a comparable conventional commercial mortgage, especially in normal interest rate environments.

Term options: SBA 504 debenture terms of 10, 20, or 25 years are available and fully amortizing — no balloon payment on the CDC portion. The conventional first mortgage term is set by the bank, commonly 10 years. If the first mortgage matures before payoff, refinancing or renewal is required, but the CDC portion continues to amortize.

Use restrictions: SBA 504 proceeds must be used for fixed assets — land, buildings, and major equipment. They cannot be used for working capital, inventory, or other operating purposes. The program also has small business size standards that limit which businesses can qualify; most businesses with tangible net worth under $15 million and net income under $5 million for the past two years qualify.

SBA 7(a) commercial real estate loans

The SBA 7(a) program is the SBA's general-purpose small business loan program, and while it is used for many purposes — working capital, equipment, business acquisition — it can also be used to finance owner-occupied commercial real estate. The 7(a) program for real estate has a different structure and risk profile than the 504 program.

Key differences from SBA 504: SBA 7(a) is a single-lender loan that is partially guaranteed by the SBA (up to 85% for loans up to $150,000, and up to 75% for larger amounts). The borrower deals with one lender, not two. This simplifies the transaction but means the lender — rather than a public market — is pricing the rate on the full loan amount. SBA 7(a) real estate rates are typically higher than the blended SBA 504 rate, particularly in low-rate environments, because the lender is setting a rate on the full balance rather than just a 50% first mortgage.

Flexibility advantage: SBA 7(a) can combine real estate and other business purposes in a single loan — buying a building and acquiring equipment, or financing a building purchase along with working capital for renovations. This flexibility is not available with the 504 program, which is strictly for fixed assets. For business acquisitions that include real estate, the 7(a) is often the better fit because it can finance the full deal under one structure.

Loan amounts: SBA 7(a) maximum loan amount is $5 million. The program can finance 100% of an eligible project with appropriate down payment. For real estate specifically, minimum down payment requirements are similar to 504 — 10% for established businesses purchasing standard properties, 15–20% for startups or special-purpose properties.

Term: SBA 7(a) real estate loans amortize over up to 25 years, fully amortizing, with no balloon payment required. This is a significant advantage over conventional commercial mortgages that often have 5- or 10-year balloons.

Conventional commercial mortgage for small businesses

Conventional commercial mortgages — those not backed by the SBA — are the dominant product for investment properties, for businesses that do not qualify for SBA programs (typically because of size or business type), and for borrowers who want to avoid SBA's occupancy requirements or program fees.

Down payment and LTV: Conventional commercial mortgages typically require 20% to 35% down, corresponding to LTV ratios of 65% to 80%. The specific LTV depends on property type (office, retail, industrial, multifamily, special-purpose), borrower credit and financial strength, and lender risk appetite. Investment commercial properties often require more equity than owner-occupied — a 35–40% down payment is not unusual for a non-owner-occupied commercial transaction at a conservative community bank.

Rate structure: Conventional commercial mortgage rates are typically variable or fixed for a short term. Common structures include a 5-year fixed rate adjusting to a market rate at year 5, or a 7- or 10-year fixed rate. Fully fixed 20- or 25-year commercial mortgages are available but less common in the conventional market than in SBA programs. Rates are typically priced as a spread over SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate), Prime, or a Treasury benchmark.

Balloon payments: Unlike SBA programs that offer fully amortizing structures, most conventional commercial mortgages have balloon payments — meaning the remaining principal balance is due at the end of the term even if the loan has been amortizing over a longer period. A common structure is a 25-year amortization with a 10-year balloon: your monthly payment is calculated as if you have 25 years to repay, but at year 10, the entire outstanding balance is due. You either pay it off, refinance, or renegotiate with the lender at that point.

No program fees: Conventional commercial mortgages do not carry SBA's upfront guarantee fees (which are typically 3% or more of the guaranteed portion of the loan for SBA programs above $1 million). For large transactions, the SBA fee can be a significant upfront cost that partially offsets the rate advantages. Large, creditworthy borrowers who can access competitive conventional terms sometimes find the conventional structure economically superior when factoring in the SBA fees.

Commercial mortgage comparison: SBA 504 vs. SBA 7(a) vs. conventional

Side-by-side comparison of the three primary commercial mortgage structures for small business owners:

Factor SBA 504 SBA 7(a) Conventional Commercial
Owner-occupied required? Yes — 51% minimum occupancy Yes — owner-occupied required No — available for investment properties too
Minimum down payment 10% (established business, standard property) 10% (established business) 20%–35% depending on property and lender
Maximum LTV 90% (80% conventional + 40% CDC, borrower 10%) 90% 65%–80%
Loan structure Two loans: bank first mortgage + CDC second Single lender loan, partially SBA-guaranteed Single lender loan, no guarantee
Maximum loan amount $5M CDC portion ($5.5M for manufacturing) $5M total Set by lender — often $25M+ at larger institutions
Amortization 10, 20, or 25 years (fully amortizing, no balloon) Up to 25 years (fully amortizing) Typically 20–25 years with balloon at term maturity
Rate type Fixed on CDC portion; market rate on bank first Variable or fixed — lender-set with SBA ceiling Fixed for term, then adjusts or balloon due
Typical APR comparison Often lowest blended rate for owner-occupied Higher than 504, lower than conventional for weaker borrowers Competitive for strong borrowers; no program fees
Upfront program fees SBA guarantee fee on CDC portion (typically 3%+) SBA guarantee fee (up to 3.5% of guaranteed portion) No SBA fees; origination fee varies by lender
Eligible uses Land, buildings, major equipment only Real estate + other business purposes in same loan Flexible — lender determines use requirements
Timeline to close 45–90 days (CDC/SBA process adds time) 30–90 days 30–60 days typical

LTV ratios and amortization structures in commercial real estate

Loan-to-value (LTV) ratio is the loan amount divided by the appraised value of the property. An $800,000 loan on a $1,000,000 property is an 80% LTV. Lenders set LTV limits based on property type, borrower strength, and program parameters.

Typical commercial mortgage LTV ratios by property type in the conventional market:

  • Industrial / warehouse: Up to 75–80% LTV. Lower risk due to functional flexibility — most industrial buildings can be repurposed if a tenant leaves.
  • Office (multi-tenant): 65–75% LTV. Market conditions affect office values significantly; lenders are conservative given changing office demand patterns.
  • Retail (multi-tenant strip center): 65–75% LTV. Anchored centers with credit tenants see better treatment than single-tenant or unanchored retail.
  • Owner-occupied commercial: 75–80% LTV with SBA programs, 65–75% conventional. The operating business adds income certainty that supports higher LTV.
  • Special-purpose (restaurant, hotel, car wash, gas station): 55–65% LTV. These properties have limited alternative uses; if the business fails, resale options are narrow. Lenders compensate by requiring more equity.
  • Multifamily (5+ units): Up to 80% LTV for stabilized properties. Multifamily benefits from diversified rental income and strong demand in most markets.

Amortization period affects your monthly payment but not the full loan term. On a 25-year amortization with a 10-year balloon, your monthly payment is calculated as if you have 25 years to repay, resulting in a lower monthly payment than a 10-year fully amortizing loan. But at year 10, the entire remaining principal balance — roughly equivalent to the balance that would remain on a 25-year mortgage after 10 years of payments — is due. This balloon risk is a critical consideration for any business taking a conventional commercial mortgage. Refinancing at balloon maturity is common but not guaranteed, especially if market rates have increased significantly or if the property's value or the business's financial profile has changed.

SBA 504 and SBA 7(a) loans for real estate are fully amortizing with no balloon on the SBA-regulated portions, which eliminates this refinancing risk — a significant advantage for businesses that value payment certainty and long-term planning.

Prepayment penalty structures explained

Commercial mortgage prepayment penalties are more complex and often more severe than residential mortgage prepayment restrictions. Understanding the structure before you sign matters enormously — unexpected prepayment costs can eliminate the economic benefit of refinancing or selling the property during the loan term.

Step-down prepayment penalty

The most common structure in community bank and credit union commercial mortgages. The penalty decreases by a fixed percentage each year. A 5-4-3-2-1 structure means a 5% penalty in year 1, 4% in year 2, and so on — no penalty after year 5. This structure is straightforward, easy to calculate, and most favorable to borrowers who intend to pay off or refinance in the medium term. SBA 7(a) loans have a similar step-down: 5% in years 1–3, declining to zero in later years depending on the program.

SBA 504 prepayment schedule

SBA 504 debentures have a specific prepayment premium that declines over the first half of the debenture term. For a 20-year debenture, the premium applies in years 1 through 10, starting at 10 times the annual interest component and declining annually, disappearing after year 10. Prepaying a 504 loan in the first few years is typically quite expensive — the structure is designed to discourage early prepayment because the debentures were sold to investors expecting long-term yields. Prepaying after the premium disappears costs nothing beyond outstanding principal and accrued interest.

Defeasance (CMBS loans)

Defeasance is the prepayment mechanism used in CMBS (Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities) loans — loans that were originated for the purpose of being securitized and sold to investors. Rather than paying a cash penalty, defeasance requires the borrower to purchase a portfolio of U.S. Treasury securities that generate exactly the remaining debt service on the loan for its remaining term. The cost depends entirely on the spread between your loan rate and current Treasury rates. In rising rate environments, defeasance is relatively cheap; in falling rate environments, it can be extremely expensive because you need a larger bond portfolio to generate the required yield. Most small business commercial borrowers should avoid CMBS structures unless the rate advantage is dramatic.

Qualification criteria by loan type

What lenders require for each major small business commercial mortgage program:

Criterion SBA 504 SBA 7(a) Conventional Commercial
Personal FICO score 680+ preferred; some lenders accept 650 with compensating factors 680+ preferred; similar flexibility at SBA Preferred Lenders 680–720+ depending on lender; higher for investment properties
Time in business 2+ years preferred; startup eligible with 15–20% down 2+ years preferred; startup programs exist for specific uses 2–3 years typically required; investment property less dependent
Debt service coverage ratio (DSCR) 1.20x–1.25x minimum on the business's global cash flow 1.20x–1.25x minimum 1.20x–1.35x minimum; investment property based on NOI
Business size limit Net worth under $15M; net income under $5M (2-year average) SBA small business size standards by industry No size limit
Tax returns required 2–3 years business + personal 2–3 years business + personal 2–3 years business + personal; full financial statements often required
Property appraisal SBA-compliant MAI appraisal required SBA-compliant MAI appraisal required Commercial appraisal required; standards set by lender

If you are a CPA, consultant, or financial advisor with clients considering commercial real estate purchases, this is a category where a referral to a finance specialist pays significant dividends. The choice between SBA 504, SBA 7(a), and conventional commercial financing has real long-term cost implications — sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars over the life of the loan — and the decision requires knowledge of current program pricing, lender appetites, and property-specific factors. Axiant Partners can connect clients with commercial real estate lenders who specialize in owner-occupied small business transactions. See our CPA referral program or broker partnership opportunities for details on how referrals work.

FAQ

Questions about commercial mortgages for small businesses

What is the difference between owner-occupied and investment commercial mortgage?

Owner-occupied means your business occupies at least 51% of the property. SBA programs require owner-occupancy and underwrite both the real estate and the operating business's financials. Investment commercial mortgages are for properties leased to unrelated third parties — underwriting focuses on NOI and property cash flow rather than the owner's business. SBA programs are not available for investment properties.

How does SBA 504 financing work for commercial real estate?

An SBA 504 is a two-part structure: a bank first mortgage covering ~50% of project cost, a CDC second loan covering up to 40%, with the borrower putting in 10% down. The CDC portion carries a fixed rate set at debenture sale — typically below conventional market rates. Terms of 10, 20, or 25 years are fully amortizing with no balloon on the CDC portion. The SBA 504 is the most favorable owner-occupied small business real estate program available in most markets.

What is the minimum down payment for a commercial mortgage?

SBA 504 and 7(a) require as little as 10% down for established businesses buying owner-occupied property. Conventional commercial mortgages typically require 20% to 35% down. Special-purpose properties (restaurants, hotels, gas stations) require more equity — 15–20% for SBA and 35–40% for conventional in many cases.

What credit score do I need for a commercial mortgage?

For SBA 504 and 7(a), most lenders look for 680+ personal FICO. Some work with 650–679 with compensating factors. Conventional commercial mortgages vary — community banks may work with 650 while larger commercial lenders often require 700+. Business credit scores, including the FICO SBSS for SBA applications, are also reviewed in underwriting.

What is a typical amortization period for a commercial mortgage?

Commercial mortgages typically amortize over 20 to 25 years. SBA 504 and 7(a) loans are fully amortizing with no balloon. Conventional commercial mortgages often have 5- to 10-year terms with 20- to 25-year amortization, creating a balloon payment at maturity. That balloon means refinancing is typically required at term end, which introduces rate and market risk.

How do commercial mortgage prepayment penalties work?

Common structures include step-down penalties (e.g., 5-4-3-2-1 declining annually), SBA 504 declining premiums (expensive in early years, disappearing after the first half of the debenture term), and CMBS defeasance (requiring Treasury securities to replace lost yield — can be very expensive). Before signing any commercial mortgage, understand the prepayment structure and calculate the cost of exiting in years 1, 3, 5, and 7 of the loan term.

Ready to explore commercial real estate financing?

Get matched to the right commercial mortgage program

Axiant Partners connects business owners and referral partners with commercial real estate lenders who specialize in SBA 504, SBA 7(a), and conventional commercial mortgage programs. Tell us about your property and business situation and we will identify the right program for your needs.