---
url: https://findutils.com/guides/sba-loan-calculator-guide
title: "SBA Loan Calculator: 7(a), 504 & Express Payments With Fees (2026)"
description: "Calculate SBA 7(a), 504, and Express loan payments with guarantee fees, amortization, and effective APR. Free calculator, live examples, current 2026 fee tiers."
category: financial
content_type: guide
locale: en
read_time: 12
status: published
author: "codewitholgun"
published_at: 2026-04-17T19:00:00Z
excerpt: "Step-by-step guide to calculating SBA 7(a), SBA 504, and SBA Express loan payments with guarantee fees, amortization, and effective APR — including current 2026 fee tiers and rate ranges."
tag_ids: ["financial", "loan-calculator", "sba-loan", "small-business", "amortization"]
tags: ["Financial", "Loan Calculator", "SBA Loan", "Small Business", "Amortization"]
primary_keyword: "SBA loan calculator"
secondary_keywords: ["SBA 7a loan calculator", "SBA 504 loan calculator", "SBA guarantee fee calculator", "SBA loan payment calculator", "small business loan calculator", "SBA loan amortization", "SBA express loan calculator"]
tool_tag: "sba-loan-calculator"
related_tool: "sba-loan-calculator"
related_tools: ["sba-loan-calculator", "business-loan-calculator", "loan-calculator", "amortization-calculator", "refinance-calculator", "break-even-calculator", "compound-interest-calculator", "roi-calculator"]
updated_at: 2026-04-17T19:00:00Z
---

## How to Calculate an SBA Loan Payment

Use the standard amortization formula — monthly payment = P × r × (1+r)ⁿ ÷ ((1+r)ⁿ − 1) where P is the principal, r is the monthly rate (annual ÷ 12), and n is the total monthly payments — then add the SBA guarantee fee as a one-time cost financed into principal or paid at closing. Our free [SBA Loan Calculator](/finance/sba-loan-calculator) runs the math for 7(a), 504, and Express programs with current 2026 fee tiers built in. For a $350,000 SBA 7(a) at 10.5% over 10 years, the monthly payment lands at about $4,724.

This guide walks through every field, shows worked examples for each SBA program, explains the guarantee fee tiers, and compares the effective APR against conventional business loans.

## Why SBA Loan Math Is Different

Conventional business loan calculators miss two costs that matter on SBA loans: the one-time SBA guarantee fee and the variable-rate structure tied to Prime.

- **Guarantee fee** — the SBA charges a one-time fee on the guaranteed portion of 7(a) loans, tiered by loan size. On a $2 million loan, that's thousands of dollars the payment-only calculators never show.
- **Variable Prime-linked rates** — SBA 7(a) rates reset periodically. A rate quoted at Prime + 2.75% today becomes a different number when Prime moves.
- **Uneven amortization on 504** — the CDC portion and bank portion of a 504 loan often have different terms and rates.
- **Prepayment penalty on 15+ year terms** — the first three years carry 5%/3%/1% declining penalties that change the refinance math.

Missing any of these makes your real cost of capital look lower than it actually is. The full [SBA Loan Calculator](/finance/sba-loan-calculator) wires all four into the effective APR.

## The Three SBA Loan Programs

| Program | Max amount | Typical term | Use case | Rate cap (2026) |
|---------|-----------|--------------|----------|-----------------|
| SBA 7(a) | $5M | 10 yr (working capital/equipment) · 25 yr (real estate) | General purpose, most common | Prime + 3.0% to + 4.5% |
| SBA 504 | $5M CDC portion (no total cap) | 10 / 20 / 25 yr | Owner-occupied real estate, equipment | Fixed, set at debenture pricing |
| SBA Express | $500,000 | Up to 10 yr (7 yr LOC) | Fast turnaround (36 hr) | Prime + up to 6.5% |

SBA Microloans (up to $50K) and Community Advantage loans follow similar rules but are small enough that the calculator treats them as 7(a) variants.

## Step-by-Step: Using the SBA Loan Calculator

### Step 1: Open the Calculator and Pick a Program

Open the [SBA Loan Calculator](/finance/sba-loan-calculator). The default is SBA 7(a) with $350,000 at 10.5% over 120 months — representative of a working-capital loan in April 2026. Switch to 504 or Express via the loan-type selector. Every field below adjusts its default hint based on the program you pick.

### Step 2: Enter the Loan Amount

SBA 7(a) loans go up to $5 million; SBA 504 shares the $5M CDC cap but the total project can be larger when combined with bank financing; SBA Express tops out at $500,000. Enter your requested amount in whole dollars. The calculator validates against the program cap and warns if you're over.

### Step 3: Set the Interest Rate

SBA 7(a) rates are variable and tied to Prime. In April 2026, typical 7(a) rates fall between 10.5% and 13.5%. If you have a term sheet, enter the exact rate. If you're estimating pre-application, use 11.5% as a realistic midpoint. For SBA 504, use the current debenture rate (check the CDC's disclosure). For SBA Express, rates run 1–3 points higher than 7(a).

### Step 4: Choose the Term

Enter the term in months. Common choices:

- Working capital / equipment: 120 months (10 years)
- Commercial real estate (7a): 300 months (25 years)
- 504 real estate: 240 or 300 months
- Express line of credit: 84 months (7 years)

Longer terms lower the monthly payment but multiply total interest. The calculator shows both side-by-side so the tradeoff is visible.

### Step 5: Add the SBA Guarantee Fee

Use the origination fee field to enter the guarantee fee percentage. Current (fiscal year 2026) tiers:

| Loan size | Guarantee fee |
|-----------|--------------|
| ≤ $1,000,000 | 0% |
| $1,000,001 – $2,000,000 | 1.45% of guaranteed portion |
| > $2,000,000 | 3.5% up to $1M + 3.75% above $1M |

The SBA guarantees 75–85% of the loan depending on size and program, so the fee applies to that fraction — the calculator handles this math for you.

### Step 6: Review Payment, Total Cost, and Effective APR

The output panel shows four numbers:

- **Monthly payment** — principal + interest only (no fee)
- **Total interest** — sum of interest over the life of the loan
- **Total cost** — principal + interest + guarantee fee
- **Effective APR** — total cost expressed as an annual percentage, including the fee

Expand the amortization schedule to see how each payment splits between principal and interest. Download the schedule as CSV to hand to your accountant or import into your own cashflow model.

## Worked Examples

### Example 1: $350,000 SBA 7(a) Working Capital

Scenario: A retail business applies for a 7(a) working-capital loan to buy inventory and hire staff.

- Amount: $350,000
- Rate: 10.5% (Prime + 2.5%, locked at application)
- Term: 120 months (10 years)
- Guarantee fee: 0% (under the $1M threshold in FY2026)

Result: Monthly payment $4,724 · Total interest $216,871 · Total cost $566,871 · Effective APR 10.5%.

Because there's no guarantee fee under $1M in 2026, the effective APR matches the stated rate.

### Example 2: $1,500,000 SBA 7(a) Real Estate

Scenario: Acquiring an owner-occupied commercial property.

- Amount: $1,500,000
- Rate: 11.25%
- Term: 300 months (25 years)
- Guarantee fee: 1.45% of the guaranteed portion (75% guaranteed × $1.5M × 1.45% = $16,313)

Result: Monthly payment $14,848 · Total interest $2,954,406 · Guarantee fee $16,313 · Total cost $4,470,719 · Effective APR ~11.29%.

The fee adds roughly 4 basis points to the effective APR — small, but worth modeling for a commercial property purchase.

### Example 3: $250,000 SBA Express Line of Credit

Scenario: A consulting firm wants a revolving LOC for seasonal cashflow.

- Amount: $250,000
- Rate: 13.5% (Prime + 5.5%, Express cap territory)
- Term: 84 months (7 years)
- Guarantee fee: 0.55% ($250K × 50% guaranteed × 0.55%)

Result: Monthly payment $4,586 · Total interest $135,253 · Effective APR 13.6%.

Express loans carry the highest rates but the fastest turnaround — 36-hour SBA approval vs 30–90 days for 7(a).

## SBA vs Conventional Business Loan: Which Is Cheaper?

| Factor | SBA 7(a) | Conventional business loan |
|--------|----------|---------------------------|
| Rate (April 2026) | 10.5% – 13.5% | 8% – 18% |
| Origination fee | 0% – 3.75% (guarantee fee) | 1% – 5% |
| Max term (real estate) | 25 years | 5 – 20 years |
| Max term (equipment) | 10 years | 5 – 7 years |
| Down payment | 10% typical | 20% – 30% typical |
| Collateral | Required for > $25K | Usually required |
| Closing time | 30 – 90 days (36 hr for Express) | 1 – 4 weeks |

Run both through our [Business Loan Calculator](/finance/business-loan-calculator) and the [SBA Loan Calculator](/finance/sba-loan-calculator), compare the effective APR, and you'll see the SBA typically wins on rate and term length. Conventional wins on speed — when cashflow is urgent, sometimes the extra percentage point is worth it.

## Common Mistakes

### Mistake 1: Ignoring the Guarantee Fee

A $2.5M SBA 7(a) loan carries a guarantee fee around $70,000. If you model only the payment, the effective APR looks 0.3–0.5 points lower than it actually is. Always enter the fee in the origination field.

### Mistake 2: Using the Quoted Rate When Rates Are Variable

SBA 7(a) rates reset quarterly with Prime. A 10.5% rate today becomes 11.25% next quarter if Prime rises 75 bp. Model a stress scenario at Prime + 200 bp to see worst-case payments.

### Mistake 3: Choosing the Longest Term Because the Payment Is Lower

A 25-year real estate loan at 11.25% costs $2.95M in interest on a $1.5M loan. A 20-year term at the same rate drops total interest to $2.21M — $740K saved. The payment is $1,500 higher per month but the total cost is dramatically lower. Use the amortization table to compare.

### Mistake 4: Forgetting the Prepayment Penalty

SBA 7(a) loans with terms of 15 years or longer have a 5% / 3% / 1% declining penalty in years one through three. If you plan to refinance when rates drop, factor that penalty into the math. Our [Refinance Calculator](/finance/refinance-calculator) handles the break-even analysis.

### Mistake 5: Not Using the Effective APR to Compare Lenders

Lenders quote rates, not APRs. An SBA 7(a) at 10.5% with a 1.45% guarantee fee and a conventional loan at 11.0% with a 0.5% origination look very different in quoted rate but often identical in total cost. Always compare effective APRs.

## Tools Used in This Guide

- **[SBA Loan Calculator](/finance/sba-loan-calculator)** — SBA 7(a), 504, and Express with guarantee fees and amortization
- **[Business Loan Calculator](/finance/business-loan-calculator)** — Conventional business term loans, equipment financing, LOC
- **[Loan Calculator](/finance/loan-calculator)** — General-purpose loan amortization
- **[Amortization Calculator](/finance/amortization-calculator)** — Standalone amortization schedule generator
- **[Refinance Calculator](/finance/refinance-calculator)** — Break-even analysis for refinancing
- **[Break-Even Calculator](/finance/break-even-calculator)** — Business break-even on fixed + variable costs
- **[Compound Interest Calculator](/finance/compound-interest-calculator)** — Model the alternative of investing the payment instead
- **[ROI Calculator](/finance/roi-calculator)** — Evaluate whether the project the loan funds will generate positive returns

## Next Steps

- If you're considering multiple financing options, compare SBA against conventional via the [Business Loan Calculator](/finance/business-loan-calculator).
- Model whether refinancing makes sense with the [Refinance Calculator](/finance/refinance-calculator).
- Calculate your project break-even with the [Break-Even Calculator](/finance/break-even-calculator) to validate the loan amount.
- Read the companion roundup: [31 Free Finance Calculators — When to Use Each](/blog/31-finance-calculators-when-to-use-each) for the full suite.

## FAQ

**Q: Is the SBA loan calculator free to use?**
A: Yes. FindUtils SBA Loan Calculator is completely free with no signup, no usage limits, and no ads. All math happens in your browser — no inputs are sent to any server.

**Q: Does the calculator support SBA 7(a), 504, and Express loans?**
A: Yes. Switch programs via the loan-type selector. The calculator applies the correct 2026 guarantee fee tiers, rate caps, and term limits for each program automatically.

**Q: What guarantee fee should I enter for a $1.5M SBA 7(a) loan?**
A: For fiscal year 2026, loans between $1,000,001 and $2 million carry a 1.45% guarantee fee on the guaranteed portion. On a $1.5M loan with 75% guaranteed, that's about 1.09% of the total loan amount — enter 1.09 in the origination fee field.

**Q: How do SBA variable rates work in the calculator?**
A: Enter the current quoted rate. To stress-test, run a second calculation at Prime + 200 bp higher and compare the payment. The calculator itself uses a fixed-rate amortization formula because variable-rate payments adjust at each reset; for a current snapshot, the fixed-rate math is accurate.

**Q: Can I download the amortization schedule?**
A: Yes. Expand the amortization section and click "Download CSV." You get a month-by-month breakdown of payment, principal, interest, and remaining balance — importable into Excel, Google Sheets, or any accounting tool.

**Q: What's the difference between interest rate and effective APR?**
A: The interest rate is what accrues on the principal. The effective APR includes the interest rate plus all one-time costs (guarantee fee, origination fee) expressed as an annual percentage. APR is the correct number for comparing loan offers from different lenders.

**Q: Is SBA loan interest tax-deductible?**
A: Yes. Interest paid on business loans — including SBA loans — is generally deductible as a business expense. Each year's deductible amount equals the interest column of your amortization schedule for that year.

**Q: Does the calculator account for prepayment penalties?**
A: The base calculation assumes no early payoff. If you plan to refinance, use the [Refinance Calculator](/finance/refinance-calculator) to model the break-even including the penalty (5%/3%/1% in years one through three for SBA 7(a) loans with 15+ year terms).
