Here is a list of loan programs available to small business owners
from the US Small Business Administration (SBA),
click
here to locate your local office of the SBA:
SBA Loan Programs
7(a) Loans
This is the SBAs primary business loan
program. It generally is used for business start-ups and to meet
the varied short- and long-term needs of existing small
businesses. Under 7(a) the agency guarantees loans to small
businesses that cannot obtain financing on reasonable terms
through other channels.
A 7(a) loan may be used for most business
purposes including start-up, expansion, equipment purchases,
working capital, inventory or real-estate acquisition. Loans
cannot be used for speculative purposes.
Participating lenders - small business
lenders that have entered into lending agreements with the SBA -
provide loans in conjunction with SBA guaranties. By reducing
risk, guaranties expand the lenders ability to make small business
loans.
Participating lenders approve loans, request
SBA guaranties and service the loans. Generally, the SBA can
guarantee up to $750,000 of a private-sector loan. The guaranty
rate is 80 percent on loans of $100,000 or less and 75 percent on
loans greater than $100,000.
Interest rates for 7(a) loans are negotiated
between the applicant and the lender. However, lenders generally
may not charge an interest rate on loans that exceeds 2.75 percent
over the prime lending rate, except for loans under $50,000, where
the rates may be slightly higher. The loan can extend to 10 years
for working capital and 25 years for fixed assets. Your local SBA
office can provide you with more details on the program. You can
also access the SBAs Web site at http://www.sba.gov/financing.
Certified & Preferred
Lenders
The most active and expert participating
lenders qualify for either the SBAs Certified Lenders Program or
Preferred Lenders Program. Both programs offer a quicker
turnaround on your loan application. Certified lenders receive a
partial delegation of authority to approve loans and receive a
response on their loan guaranty applications from the SBA within
three days. Preferred lenders have full authority to approve loans
and do not submit applications to the SBA. A list of participants
in these programs is available through your local SBA office.
Low Documentation Loan (SBALowDoc)
If you are looking for a small business loan
of $150,000 or less, SBALowDoc may be your answer. It
features a one-page SBA application, which cuts the paperwork
burden for both you and your lender. Once your application has
satisfied the lenders requirements, you and the lender together
complete the SBAs one-page guaranty application. If the loan is
approved, the SBA will guarantee 75 to 80 percent of the amount
and provide a 36-hour turnaround to the lender.
SBAExpress
SBAExpress encourages lenders to make
more small loans to small businesses. Participating lenders use
their own documentation and procedures to approve, service and
liquidate loans of up to $150,000. In return, the SBA guarantees
up to 50 percent of each loan. SBAExpress lenders can also
offer revolving lines of credit to borrowers. This new loan
program is being piloted with selected banks nationwide.
SBA Loan Prequalification
Program
Offered to armed forces veterans,
minorities, women, exporters, rural small business owners and
business owners in certain specialized industries, this program
enables the SBA to prequalify an applicant for a 7(a) loan
guaranty before the applicant goes to a bank. The maximum loan
amount is $250,000. SBA-designated intermediaries can work with
you to review and strengthen your loan application, apply to the
SBA, and upon approval of the application, find an interested
lender. The application will focus on your character, credit,
experience and reliability rather than assets.
CAPLines
This program features five types of loans
for financing the short-term and cyclical working-capital needs of
small businesses: Seasonal, Contract, Builders, Standard
Asset-Based, and Small Asset-Based. The SBA can generally
guarantee up to $750,000 of a loan under the program. If you
receive a CAPLines loan, it will generally be advanced against
your existing or anticipated inventory and/or accounts receivable.
Defense Loan & Technical
Assistance (DELTA)
Created for defense-dependent small firms
that have been adversely affected by defense cuts, DELTA provides
financial and technical assistance to help these firms diversify
into the commercial market. The SBA also leverages federal, state
and private-sector resources to provide the technical assistance.
Loan proceeds must be used to retain jobs of defense workers,
create new jobs in impacted communities, or modernize or expand in
order to remain in the national technical and industrial base. A
DELTA loan may be acquired through the 7(a) and/or 504 loan
programs. The maximum DELTA loan is $1.25 million.
Community Adjustment &
Investment (CAIP)
A partnership between the federal government
and the North American Development Bank, CAIP loans are intended
to create new, sustainable jobs and preserve existing jobs in
businesses at risk due to changing trade patterns with Canada and
Mexico. CAIP is available in selected geographic areas.
Eligibility for the program is determined from an analysis of
NAFTA-related job losses in an area/community in relation to local
unemployment rates. As a CAIP loan applicant, you must demonstrate
that within 24 months, and as a result of the loan, you will
create or preserve at least one job per $70,000 of federally
guaranteed funds.
Export Working Capital
Program (EWCP)
The EWCP provides short-term loans to small
businesses for export-related transactions. With an EWCP loan,
proceeds from export sales are the primary source of repayment.
Under the EWCP, the SBA can guarantee up to 90 percent of a
secured loan or $750,000, whichever is less. Typically, loan
maturity either matches a sales transaction cycle with a term of
up to 18 months or supports a line of credit with a term of up to
12 months.
International Trade Loan (ITL)
This program offers short- and long-term
financing to small businesses involved in exporting, as well as to
businesses adversely affected by import competition. The SBA can
guarantee up to $1.25 million for a combination of fixed-asset
financing and working capital. The working capital portion cannot
exceed $750,000.
7(m)
MicroLoan
Available in selected locations around the
country, the MicroLoan Program provides short-term loans of up to
$25,000. If you need a loan for small-scale financing purposes
such as inventory, supplies and working capital (but not to pay
existing debts), this program may be your answer. MicroLoans are
made through SBA-approved nonprofit groups, known as
intermediaries, which also provide counseling and technical
assistance. Call your local SBA office to locate the nearest
SBA-designated group.
504
Loans
The 504 Program provides long-term,
fixed-asset financing through certified development companies.
These nonprofit corporations are sponsored by private-sector
organizations or by state and local governments to contribute to
economic development through CDCs and private-sector lenders. The
SBA can guarantee debentures covering as much as 40 percent of a
504 project. The maximum SBA debenture generally is $750,000 (up
to $1 million in some cases). DELTA funding is also available
under this program.
When
Problems Arise
Should your small business encounter
difficulties, the SBA is ready to help with expert business
counseling and assistance. In the event that a borrower is unable
to meet the obligations of an SBA loan, the agency will work
closely with the lender and/or borrower to negotiate a solution.
Only when a solution cannot be found will the SBA move to
liquidate the loan
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