The SBA 504 loan program is one of the most powerful business financing tools available specifically for owner-occupied commercial real estate. If you are purchasing a building for a new business location, 504 should almost always be your first financing option to explore.
How SBA 504 works: The financing is split three ways. A conventional lender (bank or credit union) provides 50% of the total project cost as a first mortgage. A Certified Development Company (CDC) provides 40% of the total project cost through SBA-backed debentures at a fixed below-market rate. The borrower provides a minimum 10% equity injection. For new businesses or special-purpose properties (gas stations, car washes, hotels), the borrower equity requirement increases to 15% to 20%.
SBA 504 terms and rates: The CDC portion carries a fully amortizing fixed rate set at approximately 2.5 to 3.5 percentage points above the current 10-year Treasury yield. With 10-year Treasuries at historically normal levels, this translates to rates in the 5% to 7% range on the CDC portion — significantly below conventional commercial real estate rates. Terms are 10, 20, or 25 years. The bank's first mortgage is typically a 10-year balloon with a 25-year amortization schedule at current commercial rates.
SBA 504 eligibility: The business must be a for-profit entity, must be a small business under SBA standards, must occupy at least 51% of the purchased property (60% for new construction), and must demonstrate the economic development benefit required by SBA (typically job creation or retention). Total net worth cannot exceed $20 million and average net income cannot exceed $6.5 million — thresholds that most small businesses easily satisfy.
What 504 can finance: Land and building purchase; building construction; major renovations and leasehold improvements to purchased buildings; machinery and equipment with a useful life of at least 10 years. Inventory, working capital, and goodwill are not eligible for the 504 program. Working capital for a new location must be financed separately — typically through a concurrent SBA 7(a) loan or conventional working capital facility.