SBA loans offer some of the best terms available to small businesses: long repayment periods, competitive rates, and lower down payments. The trade-off is time. Knowing what each stage involves — and where the delays hide — lets you move through the process with far less stress.
Stage 1: Preparation (1–2 weeks)
Before anything is submitted, you’ll gather financials: tax returns, profit-and-loss statements, a balance sheet, a business plan, and details on how the funds will be used. The businesses that close fastest are simply the ones that prepared this package early.
Stage 2: Application & underwriting (2–4 weeks)
Your lender reviews the file, verifies the numbers, and assesses your ability to repay. Expect follow-up questions — answering them the same day is the single biggest thing in your control to keep the clock moving.
Speed tip
Most delays aren't caused by the lender — they're caused by waiting on a missing document. Build your full financial package before you apply and you can cut weeks off the timeline.
Stage 3: Approval & commitment (1–2 weeks)
Once underwriting is satisfied, you’ll receive a commitment letter outlining the amount, rate, and conditions. Review it carefully; this is where the final terms are set.
Stage 4: Closing & funding (1–3 weeks)
Final paperwork is signed, any collateral is documented, and the funds are disbursed. Altogether, a typical SBA loan runs roughly 30 to 90 days from start to funding.
When you need money sooner
If your need is urgent, an SBA loan may not fit the timeline. A short-term loan or line of credit can bridge the gap now, and you can refinance into SBA terms later once the longer process completes.
Key takeaways
- Plan for roughly 30–90 days from application to funding.
- Preparing your full financial package early is the biggest time-saver.
- Same-day responses to follow-ups keep underwriting moving.
- Bridge urgent needs with short-term funding, then refinance into SBA.