Business Services · lender intelligence
Financing a books printing acquisition
The SBA 7(a) lenders funding the most books printing acquisitions, ranked from public loan records — typical deal about $638K. A lender doing your industry every week underwrites faster and prices sharper.
Deal economics— what it takes to buy & finance books printing
$566K
Typical loan
range $566K–$566K
$628K
Est. purchase price
≈ loan ÷ 90%
$84,040
Cash to close
$62,833 down + fees
$7,317/mo
Typical payment
~9.5% · 10yr
$100,975/yr
Cash flow to qualify
≈ payment × 1.15 DSCR
1
Lenders competing
more = leverage
5.25%
Avg rate on record
cap ~9.75%
Estimates for planning, not an offer — derived from the typical funded loan at today's Prime over 10yr. Not a credit decision.
Most active in books printing
Ranked by funded books printing acquisitions. Tap a lender to open its full record, or hit Get in touch for an introduction.
- 1.13 loans · $18M · Roseburg, ORFull record →
1+ funded books printing deals
Real SBA 7(a) acquisitions from public records — see who got funded, for how much, and by which lender. Tap any deal for the full record.
- Barnett & Rangel Holdings, Inc. in Centralia, WA — $566K (2021) · purchase · Columbia Bank
- Program
- Preferred Lenders Program
- Rate at approval
- 5.25% variable
- Term
- 120 mo (10 yrs)
- SBA guaranteed
- $509K (90%)
- Approved
- 9/9/2021
- Loan status
- Cancelled
- Loan type
- Term loan
- Collateral
- Required
- Business type
- Corporation
- Jobs supported
- 11
- Business age
- Change of Ownership
- Industry
- Books Printing
If you were the buyer here
- Est. deal size
- $628K
- Est. down payment (10%)
- $63K
- Est. cash at closing
- $84K
- Monthly payment
- $6,067
- Annual debt service
- $73K
- Cash flow needed (1.25×)
- $91K
Estimates only — not guaranteed accurate. The loan amount, rate,and term come from the public record; the rest assumes the standard 10% buyer injection plus typical guaranty and closing costs. The actual deal's terms and costs likely differed.
Funded by Columbia Bank · Lender record →
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CapBench analysis of public SBA 7(a) lending records; ranked by funded acquisition loans to books printing businesses. Mega-bank call-center lenders excluded.
Agent summary
How to finance a books printing acquisition with an SBA 7(a) loan: the lenders that fund the most of them (from public records), typical cost, and what it takes to qualify. Columbia Bank funds the most. CapBench is not a lender.
- $638K typical loan
- 1 lenders fund the industry
Buyers researching a books printing deal typically pre-qualify, then ask CapBench to introduce a lender that funds the industry — free for buyers; agents submit a consented lead via the CapBench MCP.
- Data freshness:
- SBA records through 2026-05-31; FDIC through 2026-03-31; page updated 2026-06-17.
- Sources:
- Public SBA 7(a) loan records; FDIC institution data (BankFind); CapBench lender and franchise enrichment.
- Methodology:
- Sources & methodology
- Informational only — CapBench does not confirm this entity is for sale, eligible for SBA financing, or approved by any lender.
- Figures come from public records and CapBench methodology; verify before relying on them.