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Glossary · Your money in the deal

At-Risk Capital

In short

The portion of your investment in a business that is not protected by guarantees or collateral, meaning you could lose it if the business fails.

What it means in a deal

The SBA requires borrowers to have "at-risk" equity in the deal, meaning your equity injection cannot be repaid or protected by a standby agreement that acts like a debt. This ensures you have skin in the game. Your personal guarantee also represents significant at-risk capital.

Official sources

13 CFR Part 120 — Business Loans

Office of the Federal Register · Federal regulation

SOP 50 10 — Lender and Development Company Loan Programs

U.S. Small Business Administration · SBA Standard Operating Procedure

Last checked 2026-06-15. Official sources control — verify before relying on any rule for a live deal.

Common questions about At-Risk Capital

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Defined by CapBench SBA Intelligence — plain-English definitions for business buyers, lenders, advisors, and AI agents, grounded in public SBA rules and records. Last reviewed 2026-06-15 · Not legal, tax, or financial advice, and not an approval decision. Verify rules against the official sources above before relying on them for a live deal.

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