SBA 504 Loans: Fixed-Rate Financing for Real Estate and Major Equipment

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SBA 504 Loans: Fixed-Rate Financing for Real Estate and Major Equipment | GoSBA Loans
Key Takeaways
  • SBA 504 loans provide fixed-rate financing for commercial real estate and major equipment—with rates around 5.5%-6.5% for 25-year terms.
  • The structure involves two loans: a bank provides 50% (first mortgage), a CDC provides 40% (SBA-backed, fixed rate), and you put down 10%.
  • Maximum CDC portion is $5 million ($5.5 million for manufacturers), with terms up to 25 years for real estate.
  • 504 is best for large real estate or equipment purchases where fixed-rate predictability matters; 7(a) is better for business acquisitions and flexibility.

Looking for the lowest fixed-rate financing for commercial real estate or major equipment? The SBA 504 loan program offers some of the best terms available—fixed rates, 25-year terms for real estate, and down payments as low as 10%.

This guide covers how SBA 504 loans work, who qualifies, and when they make more sense than SBA 7(a) loans.

What Is an SBA 504 Loan?

Program Overview

The SBA 504 loan program provides long-term, fixed-rate financing for major fixed assets—primarily commercial real estate and large equipment purchases. It’s administered through Certified Development Companies (CDCs), which are nonprofit organizations that partner with conventional lenders.

Key Features

  • Fixed interest rates: The SBA-backed portion is always fixed
  • Long terms: 10, 20, or 25 years
  • Low down payments: As low as 10%
  • Large loan amounts: Up to $5.5 million SBA portion (higher for manufacturers)
  • Fully amortizing: No balloon payments
Who Should Consider 504?

SBA 504 is ideal for: businesses buying commercial real estate, companies purchasing major equipment ($500K+), borrowers who want fixed-rate predictability, and larger projects where rate savings matter over the life of the loan.

The 504 Loan Structure

Two Loans, One Project

Unlike SBA 7(a) (one loan from one lender), 504 loans involve two loans:

ComponentPercentageSourceRate Type
First mortgage50%Bank or lenderVariable or fixed
Second mortgage (SBA/CDC)40%CDC (SBA-backed)Fixed
Borrower equity10%BorrowerN/A

How It Works

  • Bank provides 50%: Conventional first mortgage (bank’s own terms)
  • CDC provides 40%: SBA-backed second mortgage at fixed rate
  • You provide 10%: Down payment (may be higher for special-use properties)
Why Two Loans?

This structure reduces risk for lenders (the bank’s 50% is senior and fully secured) while providing you with access to long-term fixed-rate financing on 40% of the project. For large projects, the fixed-rate CDC portion often makes the overall financing very attractive.

SBA 504 Loan Amounts and Terms

Maximum Loan Amounts

Project TypeMaximum CDC Portion
Standard projects$5,000,000
Manufacturing projects$5,500,000
Small manufacturing$5,500,000
Public policy goal projects$5,500,000

Note: These are limits on the CDC/SBA portion (40%). Total project size can be much larger.

Example: $3 Million Project

ComponentPercentageAmount
Bank first mortgage50%$1,500,000
CDC second mortgage40%$1,200,000
Borrower equity10%$300,000

Repayment Terms

Asset TypeMaximum Term
Real estate25 years
Equipment (20+ year useful life)20 years
Equipment (10+ year useful life)10 years

SBA 504 Interest Rates (February 2026)

How 504 Rates Are Set

The CDC/SBA portion of 504 loans is funded through debenture sales. Rates are based on market rates at the time of funding plus a spread for CDC fees and the SBA guarantee fee.

Current Rate Ranges (February 2026)

TermApproximate Rate Range
10-year debenture5.25% – 5.75%
20-year debenture5.50% – 6.25%
25-year debenture5.75% – 6.50%

Rates are fixed at funding and do not change over the loan term.

Total Cost Consideration

For a 504 loan, you’ll have two payments: the bank portion (50%) at the bank’s rate, and the CDC portion (40%) at the fixed debenture rate. The blended rate depends on both portions. For large projects, the fixed-rate CDC portion often makes the overall financing very attractive compared to all-variable alternatives.

Eligible Uses of 504 Funds

Approved Uses

  • Real estate purchase: Buying commercial property
  • Real estate construction: New building construction
  • Real estate renovation: Major improvements to existing property
  • Equipment purchase: Major equipment with long useful life
  • Land purchase: Land for business use
  • Debt refinancing: Under specific conditions
Not Allowed

Working capital: Use SBA 7(a) instead. Inventory: Not an eligible use. Debt consolidation: Limited—504 is for fixed assets. Speculation: Must be owner-occupied.

Eligibility Requirements

Business Requirements

  • For-profit business: Organized for profit, operating in U.S.
  • Net worth: Tangible net worth under $20 million
  • Net income: Average net income under $6.5 million (past 2 years)
  • Size standards: Must meet SBA size standards

Property Requirements

  • Owner-occupancy: Existing buildings: 51% occupancy. New construction: 60% initially, 80% within 3 years
  • Business purpose: Property must be for business use
  • U.S. location: Property must be in the United States

Job Creation/Retention

504 loans have a job creation requirement: the project should create or retain one job per $90,000 of CDC debenture funding (or $120,000 for small manufacturers). Certain public policy goals can satisfy this requirement.

504 vs. 7(a): Which Is Better?

FeatureSBA 504SBA 7(a)
Best forReal estate, major equipmentFlexible use, acquisitions
Interest rateFixed (CDC portion)Variable or fixed
Maximum amount$5.5M CDC + bank$5 million
Down payment10-20%10-20%
Number of loans21
Working capitalNoYes
SpeedSlower (60-90 days)Faster (45-75 days)
Closing complexityHigher (2 lenders)Lower (1 lender)

Choose 504 When:

  • You want the lowest possible fixed rate
  • Project is primarily real estate or major equipment
  • Project size exceeds $3 million
  • You prioritize payment predictability over speed

Choose 7(a) When:

  • You need flexibility (combine with working capital)
  • Speed is important
  • You’re acquiring a business (with or without real estate)
  • You prefer one loan, one lender simplicity
For Business Acquisitions

If you’re buying a business that includes real estate, SBA 7(a) is often simpler. The business and real estate can be financed together in one loan. 504 would require separating the components into two distinct transactions.

SBA 504 Application Process

Step 1: Find a CDC

Unlike 7(a), 504 loans require a Certified Development Company. CDCs are regional nonprofit organizations certified by the SBA. Many lenders have CDC relationships and can coordinate for you.

Step 2: Gather Documentation

  • Business tax returns (3 years)
  • Personal tax returns (3 years)
  • Personal Financial Statement (SBA Form 413)
  • Business financial statements
  • Property information (appraisal, environmental)
  • Business plan or project narrative
  • SBA Form 1919

Step 3: Bank Approval

The bank must approve their 50% first mortgage portion. This proceeds like a conventional commercial loan.

Step 4: CDC/SBA Approval

The CDC reviews the project and submits to the SBA for authorization of the 40% debenture portion.

Step 5: Closing

504 loans typically have two closings—the bank portion may close first, with the CDC portion closing after debenture funding (monthly debenture sales).

Timeline to Closing

Typical 504 Timeline

PhaseDuration
Application and bank approval2-4 weeks
CDC review and SBA authorization2-3 weeks
Third-party reports (appraisal, environmental)3-4 weeks
Closing preparation1-2 weeks
Debenture fundingVariable (monthly sales)
Total60-90 days
Debenture Sales

CDC debentures are sold monthly. If your authorization falls between sales, you may need to wait for the next sale to lock in your rate. This can add 2-4 weeks to the timeline.

The Bottom Line

SBA 504 loans offer exceptional terms for real estate and major equipment purchases—fixed rates around 5.5%-6.5%, terms up to 25 years, and down payments as low as 10%. The tradeoff is complexity (two loans, two lenders) and a longer timeline. For pure real estate purchases over $1.5M where you want rate predictability, 504 often provides the best long-term value. For business acquisitions or when flexibility matters, 7(a) is typically the better choice.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the interest rate on an SBA 504 loan?

The CDC/SBA portion (40%) has a fixed rate based on market rates at funding time—currently around 5.5%-6.5% for 25-year terms. The bank’s 50% portion is priced separately at the bank’s own terms.

How much down payment is required?

Standard is 10%. Special-use properties (gas stations, hotels, etc.) may require 15-20% down payment.

Can I use 504 for working capital?

No. 504 is only for fixed assets—real estate and major equipment. For working capital, use SBA 7(a).

What is a CDC?

A Certified Development Company is a nonprofit organization certified by the SBA to provide 504 financing. They originate and service the SBA-backed portion of 504 loans.

Is 504 better than 7(a) for real estate?

504 offers lower fixed rates but more complexity (two loans). For pure real estate purchases over $1.5M, 504 often provides better long-term savings. For smaller deals or when you need working capital too, 7(a) is often simpler.

Can I refinance with a 504 loan?

Yes, 504 loans can refinance existing real estate debt under certain conditions. However, 7(a) refinancing is often more flexible for most situations.