As of March 1, 2026, the U.S. Small Business Administration requires 100% U.S. citizen or U.S. national ownership for all SBA 7(a) and 504 loans.
This isn’t a coming change. It’s already in effect.
Even one percent ownership by a green card holder now disqualifies your business from SBA-backed financing. If you’ve been waiting to address this, or you weren’t aware until now, here’s what you need to know — and what your options are.
The stakes: SBA 7(a) and 504 loans account for billions in small business financing annually. Approximately 14 million Legal Permanent Residents in the United States — many of them entrepreneurs and business owners — are now completely ineligible for SBA-backed financing.
Here’s what changed, who’s affected, and what to do next.
The SBA issued Policy Notice 5000-876441, implementing sweeping changes to citizenship requirements. The changes stem from Executive Order 14159 and took effect March 1, 2026.
SBA loans were available to businesses owned by:
All direct and indirect owners must be:
Legal Permanent Residents are no longer eligible to hold any ownership interest — not even 1%.
Your situation: You’re acquiring a family manufacturing business for $2.5 million. The seller (a green card holder) agreed to retain 15% equity as part of the earnout.
The impact now: Your SBA 7(a) loan application is automatically denied. The seller’s retained ownership disqualifies the entire transaction under current rules.
Your options: Renegotiate the deal structure to eliminate the seller’s retained equity, find alternative financing at higher rates, or restructure so the seller is fully bought out before the SBA loan is issued.
Your situation: Your father (U.S. citizen) owns 70% of a successful HVAC company. You (green card holder) own 30%. You’re applying for an SBA 504 loan to purchase your building.
The impact now: Denied. Your 30% ownership disqualifies the business.
Your options: Transfer your stake to eligible family members, or pursue conventional commercial lending.
Your situation: You and your business partner (green card holder) co-own a medical practice 50/50. You want to buy them out using an SBA loan.
The impact now: Even though your partner is selling, if they were still an owner within the six-month lookback window, you may still be ineligible.
Your options: Complete the buyout with non-SBA financing first, wait out the six-month lookback period, then apply.
Critical rule: A loan is ineligible if, during the six months prior to SBA loan number issuance, any direct or indirect owner was an ineligible person.
The lookback rule does not apply if the ineligible person divests before the SBA issues your loan number. Timing is everything.
Action required: If you need to restructure ownership, do it now — and then plan for a six-month waiting period if the restructuring happened after March 1.
This includes:
This includes:
Your business (or any entity in the ownership chain) cannot be:
The new rules also apply to required guarantors:
All primary guarantors must be:
A supplemental or spousal guarantor may be an otherwise ineligible person (except undocumented aliens) if:
This exception is narrow. Primary guarantors must meet citizenship requirements.
| Loan Approval Date | Ownership Requirements |
|---|---|
| **Before January 1, 2026** | U.S. Citizens, U.S. Nationals, or LPRs; all must reside in U.S. |
| **January 1 – February 28, 2026** | Same, BUT up to 5% ownership allowed for foreign nationals or U.S. persons residing abroad |
| **March 1, 2026 onward** | 100% U.S. Citizen/National; green card holders completely ineligible |
If your loan was already in process before March 1: Confirm with your lender which rules apply based on when they issued PLP approval.
If you’re starting a new application now: The strictest rules apply — no exceptions.
Trace every layer:
Red flags:
Time required: 1-2 hours with your attorney and CPA
Option A: Restructure ownership
Option B: Alternative financing
Time required: Restructuring can take 2-4 weeks; alternative financing depends on deal complexity
If you have a loan application pending:
If you’re planning to apply:
Time required: 30-minute call with lender
You’ll need to prove:
Start gathering now. Lenders won’t close without complete documentation.
SBA 504 loans are a primary tool for purchasing owner-occupied commercial real estate. The new citizenship requirements hit real estate investors hard.
If you planned to close an SBA 504 deal and have ineligible owners, call your attorney and lender this week to map out alternatives.
Illinois has a significant immigrant entrepreneurship ecosystem. Many family-owned businesses have multi-generational ownership structures with mixed citizenship status.
Typical scenario:
Before March 1: These families could access SBA financing.
After March 1: They must restructure ownership or seek alternative (more expensive) financing.
Restructuring ownership in a family business isn’t just a legal transaction — it’s emotionally and financially complex. The timing matters, and the six-month lookback makes it more complicated.
While citizenship requirements tightened dramatically, other SBA eligibility rules remain the same:
Citizenship is now an additional hurdle, not a replacement for existing criteria.
Don’t assume your lender has fully updated their procedures. Many are still adapting to the February 2 policy change.
Ask these questions:
Get answers in writing. Verbal assurances won’t help if your deal falls apart at closing.
Scenario: You’re acquiring a $3 million business with an SBA 7(a) loan.
Total additional cost over 7 years: ~$978,000
That’s the real cost of an ownership structure that wasn’t addressed before closing.
I work with family-owned businesses on growth, acquisitions, and financing. Many of my clients are directly affected by the new SBA citizenship requirements.
How I help:
I understand that financing decisions affect your family’s livelihood and your business’s future. My goal is practical solutions that work for your business and your timeline — even when the deadline has already passed.
Schedule a consultation: Book a call here or call 312-216-5174.
If you have a deal in progress or pending SBA application, don’t wait. The sooner we map your ownership structure, the more options you have.
This article provides general information about SBA policy changes effective March 1, 2026. It is not legal advice specific to your situation. SBA lending policies are complex and subject to further revision. Consult with experienced legal and financial advisors before making business decisions based on this information.
The information in this article is based on SBA Policy Notice 5000-876441 dated February 2, 2026.
About Burhanuddin Law
Burhanuddin Law serves small and mid-sized family-owned businesses in Illinois with business transactions, real estate law, and fractional general counsel services. We help family businesses navigate growth, acquisitions, and complex ownership structures.
Complete our quick intake form now to book a face-to-face or virtual consultation with our legal team.
O: (312) 216-5174
F: (312) 276-8347
E: [email protected]
Serving as fractional general counsel to small and midsized business owners in Chicago, Naperville, Burr Ridge, Darien, Oak Brook, Bolingbrook, Romeoville, Joliet, Plainfield, Orland Park, Homer Glen, Lemont, Lockport, New Lenox, Mokena, Frankfort and surrounding areas.
Privacy | Copyright 2026 Burhanuddin Law LLC
We use cookies to improve your experience on our site. By using our site, you consent to cookies.
Manage your cookie preferences below:
Essential cookies enable basic functions and are necessary for the proper function of the website.
These cookies are needed for adding comments on this website.
These cookies are used for managing login functionality on this website.
Statistics cookies collect information anonymously. This information helps us understand how visitors use our website.
Google Analytics is a powerful tool that tracks and analyzes website traffic for informed marketing decisions.
Service URL: policies.google.com (opens in a new window)