What it is, how it works
An SBA loan is a small business loan that's partly backed by the U.S. Small Business Administration. The SBA doesn't hand out the money itself. Instead, it guarantees a portion of the loan made by an approved lender, and that guarantee lowers the lender's risk. That's the whole reason SBA loans tend to come with longer repayment terms and more competitive pricing than many conventional business loans. For you as the owner, it's still one loan from one lender. The government backing simply sits quietly behind it.
Most SBA lending falls into a few well-known programs, and knowing which one fits your goal is the first step to getting the right offer. The 7(a) loan is the flagship and the most flexible, used for working capital, equipment, inventory, refinancing existing debt, buying a business or funding a franchise. The 504 loan is built for larger fixed assets such as commercial real estate and heavy equipment. The microloan program covers smaller amounts for newer or very small businesses just getting started.
Because the SBA sets the rules these loans follow, the basic structure stays fairly consistent from one lender to the next. What changes is how a given lender prices your request and how they underwrite your specific business, which is exactly why it's worth seeing more than one offer before you decide.