$2,000,000 · Major Capital

How to get a $2 million business loan.

The tier for acquisitions, commercial real estate, and serious expansion. Full underwriting, longer terms, and lower rates — with SBA 7(a) (up to $5M) often leading the way. Here's how to qualify and what to expect.

$2Mloan amount
30-90dtypical timeline
10-25yrcommon terms
680+credit (typical)

Quick answer: qualifying for $2 million

At seven figures, lenders underwrite the whole business. Expect to show 2+ years of history, strong documented financials, healthy debt service coverage, a 680+ score, and usually collateral. It's more work than smaller loans — but the rates and terms are the best available, and SBA 7(a) (up to $5M) is purpose-built for it.

Best loan types for $2 million

The product follows the purpose at this size.

Loan typeBest forTermNotes
SBA 7(a)Acquisitions, general purposesup to 10-25yrUp to $5M; among the lowest rates
CRE loan / SBA 504Buying or refinancing propertyup to 25yrLong amortization, real estate as collateral
Conventional term loanStrong borrowers, faster close3-10yrCan move quicker than SBA
Equipment financingA major equipment package3-10yrEquipment secures the loan
Bridge loanTime-sensitive dealsshortFast but costlier; refinance later

What businesses use $2 million for

Acquiring a business

Buy a competitor, a supplier, or a complementary company.

Commercial real estate

Purchase or refinance your building or facility.

Major expansion

A new plant, multiple locations, or a large buildout.

Large equipment

A full production line or fleet at scale.

Partner buyout

Fund the purchase of a co-owner's stake.

Recapitalization

Restructure or consolidate larger existing debt.

Example payments on $2 million

Illustrative estimates only — not a quote. At this size, term length drives everything. Model your scenario in the calculator.

TermExample APRApprox. monthly payment
5 years~11%~$43,500
10 years~10.5%~$27,000
25 years (real estate)~9%~$16,800

Estimate your $2 million payment

Enter 2,000,000, then adjust rate and term (fill at least three of four fields). Estimates, not an offer — apply for real terms.

Requirements for $2 million

Full underwriting — the bar is high, but so is the payoff.

2+ years operating

An established track record is expected.

Strong, documented financials

Tax returns, financial statements, and healthy debt service coverage.

680+ FICO

Strong personal and business credit.

Collateral

Often real estate or equipment; a personal guarantee is standard.

The $2 million underwriting process, and how to speed it

At seven figures, the loan is only as fast as your documentation. Underwriting a $2 million request typically means a full review of two to three years of business and personal tax returns, year-to-date financials, a debt schedule, and — for real estate or acquisitions — an appraisal and often a business valuation. SBA files add their own forms. None of this is hard if you're organized; what kills timelines is documents that arrive piecemeal.

The borrowers who close fastest treat the lender like a partner: they assemble a clean package up front, respond to requests within a day, and bring their CPA into the conversation early. Expect 30 to 90 days for SBA or bank underwriting, including appraisals. If a deal is genuinely time-sensitive — a seller's deadline, a property under contract — a bridge loan can fund first and be refinanced into permanent financing once the longer process completes.

Down payment, collateral, and choosing the structure

Most $2 million loans are secured and expect the borrower to have skin in the game. For an acquisition or real estate purchase, plan for an equity injection — commonly around 10% on an SBA deal, more on conventional — plus collateral, usually the real estate, equipment, or business assets being financed. Strong global cash flow (the business plus the guarantors) is what ultimately carries the approval.

The right product follows the purpose. SBA 7(a) is the workhorse for acquisitions and general purposes up to $5 million, with long terms and competitive rates. For owner-occupied property, SBA 504 or a conventional commercial real estate loan stretches the amortization out to 25 years, which keeps the payment manageable. Very strong borrowers who value speed over the lowest possible rate sometimes choose a conventional term loan that can close faster than SBA. Buying a company? The acquisition financing guide covers seller notes and deal structure in depth.

$2 million business loan FAQs

How do I qualify for a $2 million business loan?

Expect full underwriting: 2+ years in business, strong documented financials, healthy debt service coverage, a 680+ FICO, and usually collateral. SBA 7(a) (up to $5M) is a common path.

What can it be used for?

Acquisitions, buying or refinancing commercial real estate, major expansion, and large-scale working capital. SBA 7(a) for acquisitions/general use; SBA 504 or CRE for property.

What's the monthly payment?

Term-driven — roughly $27,000/mo over 10 years at ~10.5%, or ~$16,800 amortized over 25 years for real estate near 9%. Estimate yours.

How long does it take?

Weeks, not days — typically 30-90 days for SBA/bank underwriting, appraisals, and documentation. Conventional term loans can be faster for very strong borrowers.

How much down payment do I need for a $2 million loan?

It varies by structure. SBA acquisition and real estate deals often expect an equity injection in the range of 10%, while conventional loans typically want more. The exact figure depends on the collateral, your cash flow, and the lender — model it with your CPA before you commit.

SBA or conventional for $2 million?

SBA 7(a) usually offers lower rates and longer terms but more paperwork and a 30-90 day timeline. Conventional term loans can close faster for very strong borrowers, sometimes at a higher rate. Compare total cost, not just the rate, and weigh how time-sensitive your deal is.

Can I use a $2 million loan to buy a business?

Yes — acquisitions are one of the most common uses at this size, frequently via SBA 7(a). Lenders underwrite the target's cash flow alongside yours, and deal structure (including any seller financing) matters. See the acquisition financing guide.

Will a $2 million loan show on my personal credit, and do I need a valuation?

Most $2 million loans require a personal guarantee, so the obligation can affect your personal credit and is reported in many cases. For an acquisition, expect a business valuation, and for real estate, an appraisal — both are standard parts of underwriting at this size and factor into how much a lender will advance.

Looking for a different amount?

Payment figures are illustrative estimates for general guidance only — not an offer, quote, or guarantee of approval, rate, or term. Actual terms depend on lender underwriting and your business profile. Use the calculator and apply for real terms.

Apply for a $2 million business loan

If you're acquiring, buying property, or scaling in a major way, submit one application and compare SBA, CRE, and conventional options with guidance through underwriting.