Skip to main content
← SBA lenders by industry

Industry · lender intelligence

Financing a mixed mode transit systems acquisition

The SBA 7(a) lenders funding the most mixed mode transit systems acquisitions, ranked from public loan records — typical deal about $565K. A lender doing your industry every week underwrites faster and prices sharper.

Most active in mixed mode transit systems

Ranked by funded mixed mode transit systems acquisitions. Tap a lender to open its full record, or hit Get in touch for an introduction.

Not enough public mixed mode transit systems loan history yet to rank lenders here. See the top SBA lenders overall →

Financing a mixed mode transit systems deal? Start with a lender that knows it

We'll point you to the SBA lenders already funding deals in your industry — and help you make them compete on rate and speed.

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.

CapBench analysis of public SBA 7(a) lending records; ranked by funded acquisition loans to mixed mode transit systems businesses. Mega-bank call-center lenders excluded.

Agent summary

How to finance a mixed mode transit systems 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. CapBench is not a lender.

  • $565K typical loan

Buyers researching a mixed mode transit systems 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.
  • 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.
Scroll