Here’s the part that surprises first-time buyers: you rarely need all the cash. A small-business acquisition is usually a stack of several sources — and that leverage is what makes the returns work.
The acquisition capital stack
- An SBA 7(a) loan is the workhorse for U.S. business acquisitions — up to $5 million, with a change-of-ownership purchase generally requiring a minimum 10% equity injection, and acquisition (goodwill) loans amortized over up to 10 years. (Terms change — confirm current SBA rules and your lender’s overlay.)
- Seller financing — the seller carries a note for part of the price. It’s common, it shrinks the cash you bring, and it keeps the seller invested in a smooth handoff. On full standby it can even count toward your SBA equity.
- Your equity — the cash down payment, often a slice rather than the whole.
Make sure it carries itself
The deal only works if the business’s cash flow comfortably covers the loan payments and leaves you a living. Lenders test this as a debt-service coverage ratio; you should test it yourself before you fall in love with a business. And don’t forget your personal runway during the search and transition — that’s the money bridge.
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