- Self-funded search lets you acquire a business with SBA financing while maintaining 100% ownership—no investors, no equity dilution.
- With SBA 7(a), you need just 10% equity (and only 5% in cash if you use a seller note on full standby).
- Target businesses with $300K-$1.5M in SDE, purchase prices of $1M-$5M, and diversified, recurring revenue.
- Plan for 12-24 months of search time and $150K-$300K total capital (search costs + equity injection).
- What is self-funded search?
- Self-funded vs. traditional search funds
- Why SBA financing works
- The ideal acquisition target
- How to structure financing
- Equity requirements and sources
- The self-funded search process
- SBA-specific considerations
- Common challenges and solutions
- Real success stories
- Frequently asked questions
Self-funded search has become one of the most popular paths to business ownership for ambitious entrepreneurs who want to acquire a company without raising outside capital or giving up equity.
The model is simple: find a profitable small business, acquire it with SBA financing, and operate it as the owner-CEO. No investors to answer to. No fund to raise. Just you, a business, and a proven lending program that makes it possible.
What Is Self-Funded Search?
Self-funded search is an acquisition model where an individual (“searcher”) uses personal savings and debt financing—primarily SBA loans—to buy and operate a small business. Unlike traditional search funds that raise investor capital for the search phase and acquisition, self-funded searchers maintain 100% ownership.
The Core Model
- You fund the search: Cover your own living expenses and deal costs during the search period (6-24 months)
- You fund the equity: Provide the 10% down payment from personal savings, 401(k) rollover, or family support
- SBA funds the acquisition: 7(a) loan covers 90% of the purchase price plus working capital
- You own 100%: No equity dilution, no investor board, no outside pressure
Successful self-funded searchers typically have: 10-20 years of professional experience (often MBAs, consultants, operators), $100K-$300K in accessible capital, 700+ credit score, spouse/partner income to support 12-24 month search, and operational aptitude to run a business hands-on.
Self-Funded vs. Traditional Search Funds
| Factor | Self-Funded Search | Traditional Search Fund |
|---|---|---|
| Search capital | Self-funded ($100-200K) | Investor-funded ($400-500K) |
| Acquisition equity | Personal + SBA (90%) | Investor equity + debt |
| Post-close ownership | 100% | 25-35% |
| Target deal size | $1M – $5M | $5M – $30M |
| Investor oversight | None | Board, reporting requirements |
| Time to first deal | 12-24 months | 18-30 months |
| Risk profile | Personal exposure | Shared with investors |
Why Choose Self-Funded?
Advantages: Full ownership and control, no investor relationships to manage, flexible timeline and strategy, keep 100% of upside on exit, no fundraising process.
Trade-offs: Personal financial risk (personal guarantee on SBA loan), self-fund search period expenses, smaller deal sizes (typically under $5M), no institutional support network.
Why SBA Financing Works for Self-Funded Search
The SBA 7(a) loan program is purpose-built for self-funded acquisitions:
10% Down Payment
Standard SBA equity injection is just 10% of the purchase price—far less than the 25-30% required for conventional acquisition loans. On a $2M deal, that’s $200K vs. $500K+.
10-Year Amortization
Longer terms mean lower monthly payments and better cash flow. A $1.8M SBA loan at 11.5% over 10 years costs ~$25K/month vs. ~$38K/month over 5 years.
Working Capital Inclusion
SBA loans can include working capital for the transition period, so you’re not scrambling for additional financing post-close.
Capped Interest Rates
SBA rates are federally regulated. Even in high-rate environments, you’re protected from predatory spreads.
Lender Flexibility
Because the SBA guarantees 75-85% of the loan, lenders are more willing to finance first-time business buyers with relevant (but not identical) experience.
The Ideal Acquisition Target for Self-Funded Search
Size Parameters
| Metric | Ideal Range | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $1M – $10M | Big enough to support your salary + debt service |
| SDE/EBITDA | $300K – $1.5M | Provides cushion for DSCR requirements |
| Purchase price | $1M – $5M | Fits SBA 7(a) limits; manageable equity requirement |
| Employees | 10-50 | Established team, not a one-person show |
Business Characteristics
What lenders love to finance:
- Recurring or repeat revenue: Service contracts, subscriptions, loyal customer base
- Diversified customers: No single customer over 15% of revenue
- Asset-light but profitable: Strong margins without heavy equipment dependency
- Owner-replaceable: Systems in place, not entirely dependent on seller’s relationships
- Stable or growing: Consistent performance over 3+ years
Industries that work well: B2B services (HVAC, plumbing, electrical, IT services), healthcare services (dental, PT, veterinary), manufacturing with established customers, distribution with long-term contracts, professional services (accounting, engineering, staffing).
Heavy customer concentration (>25% single customer), declining revenue trends, owner is the business (key-man dependency), regulatory/licensing risks, environmental liabilities, pending litigation.
How to Structure Self-Funded Acquisition Financing
Typical Capital Stack
For a $2.5 million acquisition:
| Source | Amount | Percentage | Terms |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buyer equity (cash) | $125,000 | 5% | No repayment |
| Seller note (full standby) | $125,000 | 5% | No payments for 10 years |
| SBA 7(a) loan | $2,250,000 | 90% | 10 years, ~11.5% |
| Total | $2,500,000 | 100% |
Per SBA SOP 50 10 8 (effective June 2025), seller notes on full standby can count for up to half of the required equity injection. This means: total equity requirement is 10%, minimum from buyer is 5%, maximum from seller note is 5%. Also build 3-6 months of working capital into your SBA loan request for transition runway.
Equity Requirements and Sources
What Counts as Equity (Per SBA SOP)
- Cash (not borrowed): Personal savings, liquidated investments
- 401(k) rollover (ROBS): Properly structured rollover for business startups
- Gifts: Family gifts with proper gift letter documentation
- Seller notes on full standby: Up to 50% of required equity
- Non-cash assets: Equipment or property contributed to the business (with appraisal)
What Doesn’t Count
- Borrowed funds (personal loans, credit cards, HELOCs with repayment from business)
- Seller notes with payments during SBA loan term
- Redeemable preferred stock or investor agreements with repayment triggers
- Search fund investor capital with equity recovery provisions
The SBA SOP specifically addresses search fund structures: any investment subject to an agreement to repay equity or make distributions to recover an investor’s investment prior to release of the guaranty is considered debt, not equity. This means traditional search fund investor capital typically does not qualify as equity for SBA purposes. Self-funded search avoids this issue entirely.
The Self-Funded Search Process
Phase 1: Preparation (1-2 months)
- Define your target criteria (industry, size, geography)
- Build financial runway for 12-24 month search
- Develop your buyer story and credentials package
- Connect with SBA brokers and lenders early
- Join searcher communities (Searchfunder, ETA groups)
Phase 2: Active Search (6-18 months)
- Source deals through brokers, direct outreach, online marketplaces
- Review 100+ opportunities to find 10-20 worth pursuing
- Submit LOIs on promising targets
- Conduct due diligence on accepted LOIs
- Expect 3-5 serious pursuits before closing one
Phase 3: Financing and Close (60-120 days)
- Package your SBA loan application
- Submit to multiple lenders (we recommend 5-10 simultaneously)
- Select lender and complete underwriting
- Finalize legal documents
- Close and fund
SBA-Specific Considerations for Self-Funded Searchers
Experience Requirements
Lenders want to see relevant experience. For self-funded searchers, this typically means:
- Management or leadership roles in similar industries
- Functional expertise transferable to the target (operations, finance, sales)
- Demonstrated business acumen (MBA, consulting, entrepreneurship)
If your background is less directly relevant, consider: retaining the seller as a consultant post-close, hiring an experienced GM or COO, or partnering with an industry expert.
DSCR Requirements
Your acquisition must demonstrate ability to service debt. Lenders typically require DSCR of 1.15x-1.25x, calculated as:
DSCR = (SDE – Owner Salary) ÷ Annual Debt Service
Remember to account for your own salary when calculating pro forma DSCR.
All SBA 7(a) loans require personal guarantees from owners with 20%+ ownership. For self-funded searchers owning 100%, you personally guarantee the full loan. This is the trade-off for maintaining full ownership.
Common Self-Funded Search Challenges
Challenge 1: Running Out of Runway
Problem: Search takes longer than expected; personal savings depleted
Solution: Budget for 18-24 months. Consider part-time consulting during search. Set hard decision points for continuing or returning to employment.
Challenge 2: Competing with Well-Funded Buyers
Problem: PE firms and funded searchers can move faster and pay more
Solution: Target smaller deals ($1-3M) where institutional buyers aren’t active. Emphasize your commitment to the business and employees.
Challenge 3: Seller Won’t Provide Standby Note
Problem: You need the seller note for 5% equity credit
Solution: Explain the tax benefits of installment sale treatment. Show that your SBA financing is solid. Be prepared to provide full 10% in cash if necessary.
Challenge 4: First-Time Buyer Skepticism
Problem: Lenders and sellers question ability to run the business
Solution: Document relevant experience thoroughly. Get pre-qualified with lenders before making offers. Show you’ve done your homework on the industry.
Real Self-Funded Search Success Stories
Case Study 1: Former Consultant Buys HVAC Company
| HVAC Services — $2.1M Acquisition | |
|---|---|
| Searcher background | 12 years management consulting, MBA |
| Search duration | 14 months |
| Business | Commercial HVAC services, $3.2M revenue, $620K SDE |
| Purchase price | $2.1M (3.4x SDE) |
| Buyer equity | $105,000 (5%) |
| Seller note (standby) | $105,000 (5%) |
| SBA loan | $1,890,000 (90%) |
| Key success factor | Operations experience from consulting; retained seller as advisor |
Case Study 2: Corporate Finance Pro Acquires Manufacturing Business
| Precision Manufacturing — $3.8M Acquisition | |
|---|---|
| Searcher background | 15 years corporate finance, Fortune 500 |
| Search duration | 18 months |
| Business | Precision manufacturing, $5.8M revenue, $1.1M SDE |
| Purchase price | $3.8M (3.5x SDE) |
| Buyer equity | $190,000 (5%) |
| Seller note (standby) | $190,000 (5%) |
| SBA loan | $3,420,000 (90%) |
| Key success factor | Strong financials + hired experienced plant manager |
Self-funded search offers a path to business ownership that preserves 100% equity while leveraging the SBA’s favorable lending terms. The key is thorough preparation, realistic runway planning (budget for 18-24 months), and working with the right financing partners. Plan for $150K-$300K total capital: $50K-$100K for search expenses plus 5-10% of purchase price for equity.
Frequently Asked Questions
Plan for $150K-$300K total: $50K-$100K for search expenses (12-18 months) plus 5-10% of purchase price for equity. A $2M acquisition with 5% cash down requires $100K equity plus search costs.
Yes. ROBS (Rollover for Business Startups) allows tax-advantaged use of retirement funds. Requires proper legal structure and ongoing compliance. Budget $5-10K for setup costs.
Most self-funded searchers target $1M-$5M purchase prices. Below $1M, businesses often lack infrastructure. Above $5M, you may need pari passu financing and the equity requirement becomes substantial.
Average is 12-18 months. Some find deals in 6 months; others take 24+ months. Factor this into your runway planning.
No, but many self-funded searchers have MBAs. What matters more is relevant professional experience and demonstrated business acumen. Strong operators without MBAs succeed regularly.
Yes, but it complicates personal guarantees (both will guarantee) and equity splits. Many searchers prefer to go solo to maintain full control and avoid partnership dynamics.