Starting June 1, 2025, the SBA’s revised SOP introduces stricter requirements for seller involvement and deal structure. Here are the three biggest changes you should be aware of—and how they affect your business’s sellability.
Under the new rules, if a seller retains any equity in the business after the sale and receives cash proceeds, they are considered a “divesting” owner—and must personally guarantee the buyer’s SBA loan for two years.
Why this matters: Most sellers aren’t interested in putting their personal credit on the line after selling. This rule effectively eliminates rollover equity as a viable strategy for sellers in SBA-funded deals.
Seller notes are still allowed, but there’s a catch: they must remain on full standby. That means no payments—of interest or principal—until the SBA loan is completely paid off. In many cases, that’s a full 10 years.
What it means for you: Seller financing will become much less attractive, reducing flexibility in deal structuring. You may need to rely more on cash buyers or adjust your terms to remain competitive.
The SBA now requires that sellers exit the business entirely—no employee roles, consulting agreements, or license-holder positions—within one year of closing.
This is a big issue for skilled trades businesses (like HVAC, plumbing, or electrical) where the owner often holds a critical license. If you can’t stay post-sale, you’ll need someone else in your company to take over that license.
The new rules are strict—but they don’t have to block your exit. Here are three actions to take right now:
If you hold a required license, hire or promote someone who already has one. Train them as your successor so the business can operate license-compliant after you exit.
Strategic and institutional buyers will likely dominate SBA-restricted deals. To appeal to them, your business should be well-managed, with a strong sales team and $1–2M+ in net profit. Now is the time to grow intentionally.
With SBA buyers facing tighter restrictions, expect more deals funded with personal cash, home equity lines (HELOCs), or friends/family capital. These buyers may request more seller carry—but without the same structure or timeline of an SBA deal.
These SBA changes highlight the importance of resilient, transferable businesses—those with strong teams, recurring revenue, and minimal owner dependence. These businesses don’t just sell faster—they also command higher valuations.
Whether you plan to exit next year or five years from now, now is the time to prepare.