SBA LenderData

How to choose an SBA 7(a) lender in 2026: a data-driven guide

Based on analysis of 357,866 SBA 7(a) loans totaling $185.9 billion, approved between FY2020 and 2025-12-31. Source: SBA Office of Capital Access FOIA dataset.

TL;DR. "Best SBA lender" has no universal answer. What matters: (1) the lender's charge-off rate, (2) whether their average loan size matches yours, (3) whether they actively fund your industry, and (4) whether they operate in your state. Most "best SBA lenders" lists rank by ad revenue or affiliate commission. This guide ranks by the actual record — loans they approved, dollars they funded, and loans that went bad.

Why this guide exists

Search "best SBA lender" and you'll find a dozen listicles that recommend the same 5–8 banks. Almost none of them show their methodology. Fewer still look at what happens after the loan is approved — whether the lender's borrowers tend to pay off or default.

This guide is different in exactly one way: every claim is computed from the public SBA FOIA dataset. The SBA publishes every 7(a) loan it guarantees — borrower, lender, amount, rate, term, industry, state, and outcome. The dataset isn't secret. It's just hard to aggregate cleanly, so most sites don't. We did, and it underpins every page on sbalenderdata.com.

What is an SBA 7(a) loan, in 100 words

The 7(a) program is the U.S. Small Business Administration's flagship loan-guaranty program. A commercial lender (bank, credit union, or non-bank SBA lender) makes the loan; the SBA guarantees up to 75–85% of the principal. That guarantee is why a lender will approve a loan they'd otherwise pass on. For the borrower, 7(a) terms are usually longer and rates modestly lower than conventional small-business debt. The maximum loan size is $5 million. Use of funds is broad: working capital, equipment, real estate, business acquisition, franchise purchase, debt refinance.

The five metrics that actually matter

1. Approval volume — "is this lender actually an SBA lender?"

Of the 2,186 distinct lenders in our dataset, only 94 have approved more than 500 loans since FY2020. Another 272 approved between 100 and 500. Everyone else dabbles. The dabblers aren't bad — they may just not have the dedicated SBA underwriting team that makes the process smooth. A lender that approves 5–20 SBA loans per year is probably processing them as exceptions. A lender in the top 94 has a department.

Our full lender list ranks all lenders with ≥50 loans since FY2020 by dollars approved. If your prospective lender isn't on that list, they are not a meaningful SBA lender in the post-2020 era.

2. Charge-off rate — the underrated underwriting signal

Charge-off rate is the percentage of a lender's loans that the SBA ultimately writes off as uncollectable. It is a lagging indicator, so we compute it only on the FY2020–FY2023 cohort, which has had time to resolve.

Among lenders with ≥500 mature loans, charge-off rates range from 0.00% to 12.58% — a 28x gap. That's not random. It reflects underwriting discipline, industry mix, and how willing the lender is to push a marginal deal through.

Safest (500+ mature loans) Charge-off % Riskiest (500+ mature loans) Charge-off %
Newtek Bank 0.00% CDC Small Business Finance 12.58%
Harvest Small Business Finance 0.00% United Midwest Savings 8.18%
Commonwealth Business Bank 0.00% TD Bank 7.66%
Northwest Bank 0.00% BayFirst National Bank 5.94%
Bank of America 0.29% Wells Fargo 5.48%
Live Oak Bank 0.44% JPMorgan Chase 4.02%

Low charge-off rate does not necessarily mean the lender will approve your loan. A 0.00% rate can reflect extreme selectivity — rejecting everything marginal. High charge-off rate does not necessarily mean bad underwriting either — a lender deeply focused on restaurants (a high-default industry) will naturally run hotter than a dentist-office specialist. Read this metric alongside the industry and loan-size data below.

3. Average loan size — are they even the right size for you?

The loan-size distribution across lenders varies dramatically. Among lenders with ≥500 total loans:

Match your loan to the lender's loan size. It's the single easiest filter and most applicants ignore it.

4. Industry specialization — who actually knows your business?

SBA loan approval is faster and smoother when the lender has underwritten your industry before. The top 10 funded industries since FY2020:

#NAICSIndustryLoansAvg loan
1722511Full-Service Restaurants16,354$528K
2722513Limited-Service Restaurants11,949$473K
3236118Residential Remodelers7,351$184K
4713940Fitness & Recreational Sports Centers6,770$408K
5484121Long-Distance Trucking6,764$207K
6238220Plumbing / HVAC Contractors6,128$438K
7561730Landscaping Services5,962$303K
8238990Specialty Trade Contractors5,857$479K
9484110Local Freight Trucking5,639$271K
10811111General Auto Repair5,413$477K

Every one of these industries has a different top lender. Huntington National Bank dominates restaurants. Live Oak Bank is the #1 lender to dentists, veterinarians, and self-storage operators. BayFirst and United Midwest are active in restaurants but with much higher default rates. Pick a lender who has funded your exact industry hundreds of times, not a generalist who will treat your deal as a learning curve.

5. Geographic reach — do they even lend in your state?

The top five states by 7(a) volume since FY2020: California (41,504), Texas (27,103), Florida (26,494), New York (22,213), and Ohio (20,597). National lenders — Live Oak, Newtek, Huntington, Bank of America, Chase — operate in all 50 states. Many strong regional lenders only fund in 5–15 states. Our per-state pages list the top 15 lenders active in each state.

The 10 biggest SBA 7(a) lenders since FY2020

By total dollars approved. Click any row for the full profile and risk data.

# Lender Loans Total approved Charge-off %
1Live Oak Banking Company9,065$12.61B0.44%
2The Huntington National Bank36,214$8.02B1.79%
3Newtek Bank10,594$4.88B0.00%
4Readycap Lending, LLC9,561$4.13B3.11%
5U.S. Bank16,217$3.97B3.11%
6Celtic Bank5,139$3.61B2.71%
7Byline Bank2,776$3.39B1.38%
8Wells Fargo11,784$3.16B5.48%
9Newtek Small Business Finance4,443$2.90B0.54%
10TD Bank16,685$2.45B7.66%

How to shortlist three lenders for your deal

  1. Find your industry page. Start at our industries index and pick your NAICS. That page ranks the top 15 lenders for your industry specifically.
  2. Cross-reference your state. Open the state index and check which of the top-15 for your industry also appear in the top-15 for your state. That's usually 3–6 names.
  3. Check each candidate's lender profile. Look at average loan size (does it match yours?), charge-off rate (avoid the 5%+ tier unless they're the only realistic option), and top industries (does yours appear?).
  4. Submit to all three. SBA lenders do not consolidate applications — you can apply to multiple in parallel. Pick the best offer.

What to ask on the first lender call

Common mistakes when picking an SBA lender

Methodology

All figures computed from the SBA Office of Capital Access 7(a) FOIA dataset, covering loans approved from FY2020 through 2025-12-31 (357,866 loans, $185.9B). Charge-off rates are computed only on the FY2020–FY2023 cohort to allow mature outcomes. Rankings are restricted to lenders with ≥500 mature loans where statistical significance matters (charge-off risk rankings), and ≥50 total loans everywhere else. Full methodology: sbalenderdata.com/methodology.

This guide is not legal or financial advice. A lender's historical activity does not guarantee the outcome of your specific loan application.

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