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Small Business Loans for Veterans: Every Program in 2026

By ScoreVet Research · 2026-04-18 · United States

TL;DR — Key Facts

  • SBA Veteran Advantage waives or reduces the upfront guarantee fee on SBA 7(a) loans for veteran-owned businesses — a direct cost reduction of $2,500–$15,000+ on typical acquisition loans.
  • SBA Express Loans offer a streamlined path for veterans: up to $500,000, faster approval (36 hours for SBA response), and no upfront guarantee fee through Veteran Advantage.
  • Veteran Business Outreach Centers (VBOCs) provide free counseling and loan application support — 22 centers across the US.
  • Military reservists called to active duty can apply for MREIDL (Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster Loan) to cover business operating expenses during deployment.
  • Military experience translates well in loan underwriting: leadership, logistics, and operational management backgrounds directly satisfy the "relevant experience" requirement most lenders need.
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What the veteran designation actually unlocks in SBA lending

Veteran status in SBA lending isn't a separate loan program — it's primarily a fee reduction applied to standard SBA products. Understanding what you're getting, and not getting, avoids the confusion that leads buyers to search for a "veteran loan" that doesn't exist as a distinct product.

What veteran status unlocks: — Fee waivers or reductions on SBA 7(a) loans through SBA Veteran Advantage — Dedicated counseling through the Veteran Business Outreach Center (VBOC) network — Priority consideration in some SBA Express programs — Access to the Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster Loan (MREIDL) program if you're a reservist

What it doesn't change: — The credit score requirements (same 680+ floor at most lenders) — The DSCR cash flow requirements (1.25× minimum) — The down payment requirements (10% minimum on SBA) — The underwriting process length

The fee waiver is real and meaningful. On a $750,000 SBA 7(a) loan, the guarantee fee reduction under Veteran Advantage can save $5,000–$15,000 at closing. That's not trivial.

SBA Veteran Advantage: the fee reduction program

SBA Veteran Advantage reduces or eliminates the upfront SBA guarantee fee for veteran-owned small businesses. The program applies to SBA 7(a) loans and SBA Express loans.

**Eligible borrowers:** — Veterans (including those with a discharge other than dishonorable) — Service-disabled veterans — Active-duty service members eligible for the Transition Assistance Program — Reservists and National Guard members — Current spouses of any of the above — Widowed spouses of service members or veterans who died during service or from a service-connected disability

**Fee structure under Veteran Advantage:** For SBA 7(a) loans up to $350,000: guarantee fee is waived entirely (normally 2%–3% of guaranteed amount). For SBA 7(a) loans above $350,000: guarantee fee is reduced by 50%. For SBA Express loans up to $500,000: guarantee fee is waived.

On a $500,000 SBA 7(a) loan with an 85% guarantee ($425,000 guaranteed), the normal guarantee fee at 3% is $12,750. Under Veteran Advantage with a 50% reduction, you save $6,375. On a $350,000 loan, the fee is waived entirely — $7,000–$10,500 in savings depending on the guarantee percentage.

To apply for Veteran Advantage, you document your status during the SBA loan application — a DD-214 (discharge document), VA letter, or active-duty orders. The lender submits this documentation with the loan package. There is no separate application for the program.

SBA Express Loans for veterans

SBA Express is a streamlined version of the 7(a) program designed for faster decisions: the SBA commits to responding within 36 hours of a complete application (vs weeks for standard 7(a) review). The trade-off is a lower guarantee — 50% vs 85% — which means lenders take more risk and may be more selective.

Key terms for SBA Express: — Maximum loan amount: $500,000 — SBA guarantee: 50% (lender absorbs 50% of default risk) — SBA response time: 36 hours — Guarantee fee for veterans: waived under Veteran Advantage — Interest rate: same spread caps as standard 7(a)

For veteran buyers pursuing acquisitions in the $200,000–$500,000 range, Express is worth asking about — particularly if you're working with an SBA Preferred Lender (PLP) who already has delegated authority on standard 7(a) approvals. The practical speed advantage of Express over a well-run PLP 7(a) application may be smaller than advertised, but the fee waiver is the same.

For amounts above $500,000, Express isn't available — you're in standard 7(a) territory with Veteran Advantage fee reduction.

Veteran Business Outreach Centers (VBOCs)

The SBA funds 22 Veteran Business Outreach Centers across the US. VBOCs are the veteran equivalent of Women's Business Centers — nonprofit organizations providing free counseling, loan application support, and referrals to active SBA lenders.

What a VBOC can do for you: — Help you assess whether your financials and credit profile are ready for an SBA application — Introduce you to SBA lenders in your region who actively work with veterans — Review your loan package before submission to identify gaps — Connect you with other veterans who have completed similar deals — peer insight on what worked — Provide referrals to legal, accounting, and business advisory resources

VBOC services are free. Given that a 30-minute conversation with a VBOC counselor can save you weeks in a failed application, it's one of the highest-ROI preparatory steps available.

Find your nearest VBOC at sba.gov/local-assistance or by calling the SBA Answer Desk at 1-800-827-5722. Many VBOCs operate virtually and can work with veterans in any location within their region.

MREIDL: the Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster Loan

The Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster Loan (MREIDL) is a distinct SBA program for a specific situation: a small business suffers economic harm because an essential employee — including the owner — is called to active military duty.

Key terms: — Maximum loan amount: $2 million — Interest rate: 4% (fixed, government-subsidized) — Terms: up to 30 years — Use of proceeds: operating expenses the business cannot cover due to the reservist's absence — rent, utilities, payroll, accounts payable — Not available for: lost profits, business expansion, or costs that would have been incurred regardless of the call-up

MREIDL is not a business acquisition tool. It's an emergency stabilization tool for businesses already operating that lose a key person to military service. If you're a reservist buying a business, you cannot use MREIDL for the acquisition — you'd use standard SBA 7(a) with Veteran Advantage for that.

If you're buying an existing business that has an employee who is a reservist, ask whether any recent MREIDL has been taken — it would appear in the business's debt schedule and affects the DSCR calculation.

Applications go directly to the SBA's disaster loan office, not through a bank.

How military experience helps — and where lenders still need documentation

Military backgrounds translate surprisingly well into the "relevant experience" criterion that SBA lenders evaluate.

Leadership experience (NCO, officer) maps directly to management experience. Supply chain and logistics backgrounds are relevant for any distribution or operations-heavy business. Intelligence and analytical roles translate to due diligence and management capability. Many service members have direct exposure to running operations under budget constraints, managing personnel, and executing against plans — exactly what lenders want to see in an acquisition buyer.

The challenge: military careers are documented in ways civilians aren't used to presenting. A DD-214 and a list of assignments doesn't communicate this to a bank underwriter the same way a resume does.

Practical steps to translate your background: — Work with a VBOC counselor to build a business resume that maps military experience to business management equivalents — Get specific about budget authority you held, number of personnel managed, and operational complexity — If you're transitioning from active duty, include Transition Assistance Program (TAP) documentation — lenders recognize it and know it signals intentional preparation — Industry-specific experience matters: if you managed motor pools, automotive service is a natural fit; if you managed food service operations, QSR franchise underwriting becomes more straightforward

Other veteran-focused lenders and programs

Beyond SBA programs, several private lenders and organizations specifically serve veteran entrepreneurs:

**Hivers and Strivers:** Angel investment fund specifically targeting businesses founded by graduates of US service academies (West Point, Annapolis, Air Force Academy, Coast Guard Academy). Invests $250,000–$1M in early-stage companies. Not a loan — equity investment. Relevant for veteran founders building scalable businesses, not for franchise acquisition.

**StreetShares (now part of Lendio):** Originally a veteran-focused online lender, now integrated into Lendio's marketplace. Still serves veteran borrowers through the platform with expedited review.

**SBDCs (Small Business Development Centers):** Not veteran-specific, but many SBDCs have veteran-focused counselors and are co-located with VBOCs. Free advisory services on business planning, financial projections, and loan preparation. Find yours at americassbdc.org.

**State-level programs:** Many states have veteran-specific loan programs, grant funds, or tax incentives for veteran-owned businesses. Quality varies significantly. Your state's economic development office and your nearest VBOC are the best sources for current state program availability.

**VA VR&E (Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment):** Not a business loan, but worth knowing: disabled veterans using VR&E benefits may be able to get business training and startup support covered as part of their rehabilitation plan. This is not an acquisition financing vehicle but can reduce out-of-pocket costs during the planning and preparation phase.

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Small Business Loans for Veterans: Programs, Rates, and How to Apply | ScoreVet