Glossary · The loan itself
Loan exposure
In short
This is the total amount of money a lender or the SBA has at risk on a particular loan. It represents the maximum potential loss if the borrower defaults.
What it means in a deal
For the SBA, loan exposure is the guaranteed portion of the loan. Lenders consider their total exposure when underwriting, assessing the collateral and your repayment capacity. You need to present a strong case for the business's ability to cover both the principal and interest.
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.
Related terms
Common questions about Loan exposure
- Does an SBA loan have better terms than a regular bank loan?
- What is the minimum loan amount for an SBA 7(a) loan?
- What is the maximum loan amount for an SBA 7(a) loan?
- Is there a typical average loan size for an SBA 7(a) loan?
- How is the maximum loan amount for an SBA 7(a) loan determined?
- Is there a minimum loan amount for an SBA 7(a) loan program?
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.
See which SBA lenders would fund your deal
Tell us the business, the price, and where you are — we'll point you to the lenders most likely to approve a 7(a) like yours and flag what trips up approval.
Free · No documents · Usually same-day
Backed by data on 1,000+ SBA lenders and 300,000+ funded deals. Your details go only to lending partners you ask to be matched with — never sold to advertisers.