SBA Loan vs Term Loan — Which Should You Choose?

Last updated: July 2026 · By the LoanPro Advisor editorial team

Choose an SBA loan when the need is large and long-horizon and you can wait weeks — it's the cheapest capital available to most small businesses. Choose a term loan when you need funds in days or the project pays back within 6–24 months. Many owners run both tracks at once and take the better offer.

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The full side-by-side

SBA 7(a)Conventional term loan
RateLowest available — government guaranteeHigher — priced on business risk
Amount (via REIL)Up to $10MUp to $250K
Term6 months–25 years6–24 months
SpeedWeeks; FastTrack compresses1–3 days
DocumentationFull package: tax returns, financials, debt schedule3 months bank statements
FeesGuarantee + closing feesOrigination varies; no pre-payment penalties via REIL
Credit barHigher for standard; variants flex500+ FICO paths
Best forReal estate, acquisition, expansion, refinancingFast, defined, shorter-payback needs

A simple decision framework

  1. How fast do you need funds? Days → term loan. Weeks are fine → SBA.
  2. How long until the investment pays back? Under 2 years → term loan matches the horizon. Longer → SBA's 10–25 year terms keep payments small.
  3. How big is the need? Over $250K → SBA territory. Under → either.
  4. Do you meet SBA criteria today? If not, term loan now + refinance into SBA later is the standard two-step.

The hybrid strategy nobody explains

SBA 7(a) funds can refinance existing business debt. That makes "fund fast now, refinance cheap later" a legitimate plan rather than a compromise: take a term loan (or working capital via LoanSource Pro) to capture the opportunity this week, then let a specialist package your SBA refinance once your documentation is ready. You pay the higher rate only for the bridge months.

LoanPro Advisor is an independent educational resource operated by vCIO, LLC — not a lender and not affiliated with the U.S. Small Business Administration. We may be compensated when you connect with our funding partner, REIL Capital. This is information, not financial advice.

SBA vs term loan FAQ

Should I get a term loan or an SBA loan?

Get an SBA loan when the need is large, the payback horizon is long, and you can wait weeks — it's the cheapest capital most small businesses can access. Get a term loan when you need funds in days, the project pays back within 6–24 months, or you don't yet meet SBA criteria.

Is an SBA loan always cheaper than a term loan?

Almost always on rate — the government guarantee lowers lender risk. But add guarantee fees, closing costs, and weeks of waiting: for small, short-payback needs, a fast term loan repaid quickly (with no pre-payment penalty) can cost less in practice and protect the opportunity.

Can I start with a term loan and refinance into an SBA loan?

Yes — it's a common strategy. Fund the need now with a term loan, build financials and credit, then refinance into a 7(a) for lower long-term cost. SBA 7(a) funds can be used to refinance business debt.

Can I apply for both at the same time?

Yes. A specialist can run both tracks in parallel through REIL Capital — checking options involves no hard credit pull, so you can compare real offers before committing to either.

Run both tracks — take the better offer

One eligibility check covers SBA and term options · No hard credit pull

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