Nobody warned you that buying a veterinary practice would require you to become fluent in loan structures. And yet here you are, trying to decode the difference between an SBA 7(a) and a conventional healthcare loan while also vetting a $1.5 million practice and wondering if the seller would consider carrying a note.
Veterinary practice financing is genuinely more navigable than it appears from the outside—but only once you understand that there is no universal right answer. There are four real financing paths: SBA 7(a) loans, conventional bank loans, seller financing, and partnership buy-ins. Each one fits a different buyer profile, deal size, and risk tolerance. The mistake most first-time buyers make is not choosing the wrong path—it’s assuming one path is automatically correct before they’ve assessed the others. That assumption quietly costs people money or a deal they could have closed.
Here’s how each option actually works, what lenders are focused on, and where the numbers land on a real acquisition.
SBA 7(a): The Standard Path, But Not Always the Right One:
The SBA 7(a) loan is the most common financing tool for individual veterinary acquisitions, and its main appeal is straightforward: qualified buyers can put down as little as 10% and finance the rest. For most first-time buyers without significant liquidity, nothing else comes close.
Here’s what that looks like on a real deal. A $1.5 million practice acquisition with 10% down means $150,000 out of pocket and $1.35 million financed. At current SBA 7(a) rates—typically priced at prime plus 2.75%, which puts most 2026 borrowers in the 10% to 11% range—monthly debt service on $1.35 million over a 10-year term runs approximately $17,500 to $18,500. A practice generating $500,000 in adjusted EBITDA handles that comfortably while still paying the owner a competitive salary. That math is why SBA dominates individual acquisitions.
What lenders actually examine goes well beyond your credit score. They want three years of the practice’s tax returns; normalized profit and loss statements; a personal financial statement showing liquidity post-closing; a business plan covering the first two years of your ownership, and a lease with at least 10 years of remaining term—including renewal options. They also calculate a debt service coverage ratio: most lenders want the practice to generate at least $1.25 for every $1.00 of loan obligation. If that ratio is tight, the deal may need restructuring before it gets approved.
One thing buyers frequently underestimate: SBA approval takes 60 to 90 days from a complete application. That timeline is manageable — but only if you start the pre-qualification process before you find the practice you want, not after.
Conventional Loans: When Speed Matters More Than Down Payment Size:
Here’s the honest version of the conventional vs. SBA comparison that most buyers don’t hear: SBA is not always better. In competitive markets, it can actually cost you the deal.
Conventional veterinary loans — offered through banks and credit unions that specialize in healthcare practice acquisitions — typically require 15% to 20% down. That’s a larger out-of-pocket number. But conventional loans close in 30 to 45 days, which matters enormously when a seller has two or three qualified buyers in active conversations. If you have the liquidity to cover the larger down payment and your financial profile is strong, a conventional loan can be the smarter choice — not because it’s cheaper, but because it’s faster and signals to a seller that you can execute.
Seller Financing: More Common Than You Think, and More Useful Than It Looks:
Seller financing appears in veterinary transactions far more often than first-time buyers expect. It typically surfaces in one of two situations: the practice doesn’t fully qualify for bank financing on its own numbers, or the seller wants a faster close than full bank underwriting allows.
A seller note usually covers 10% to 20% of the purchase price at a negotiated interest rate — typically 5% to 7%. On a $1.5 million deal, that means the seller carries $150,000 to $300,000 while the buyer finances the balance through an SBA or conventional. The practical effect is that the buyer’s required down payment effectively shrinks, which is why seller financing often salvages deals that would otherwise stall.
The detail that kills otherwise workable deals — and it happens — is a misunderstanding about subordination. Most SBA lenders require any seller-held note to be fully subordinated to the primary loan, meaning the seller receives no payments until the bank’s debt service is current. Sellers who understand this going in are straightforward to negotiate with. Sellers who encounter it mid-underwriting, after the deal is already structured, sometimes walk. If you’re discussing seller financing, get the subordination conversation on the table early. It’s a short conversation that prevents a very long problem.
Partnership Buy-Ins: The Financing Path Nobody Talks About Enough:
A partnership or associate buy-in is structurally different from buying a practice off the open market—and in many ways, it’s the most underappreciated acquisition path in veterinary medicine.
Here’s how it works in practice. A veterinarian who has been working as an associate for four years approaches the practice owner about purchasing a 30% equity stake as a first step toward full ownership over five to seven years. The buy-in is financed through a combination of SBA lending and a seller note, the purchase price is based on a formal valuation, and the transition happens gradually — with the associate building equity while continuing to generate revenue the practice depends on.
The lender’s risk profile on this deal looks completely different from a third-party acquisition. The buyer already knows the client base, the staff knows and trusts them, revenue is unlikely to shift at closing, and the seller has a financial incentive to support the transition. Conventional lenders, in particular, tend to underwrite these deals more favorably — which sometimes makes it possible to finance a veterinary practice through a buy-in on terms that wouldn’t be available for an arm’s-length acquisition of the same size.
If you’re already working in a practice and ownership has ever come up in conversation, that conversation is worth pursuing more formally than most associates do.
What All Four Paths Are Actually Evaluating:
Every lender—SBA, conventional, or otherwise — is asking the same underlying question: does this practice generate enough reliable cash flow to service the debt and sustain the new owner’s income?
That question gets answered through the financials, but experienced lenders also look at the lease terms, equipment condition, staff tenure, and local competition. A buyer who has already done that work before walking into a lender conversation moves through underwriting faster. Sellers notice it too — and it changes how they respond to an offer.
If you’re searching for a vet clinic for sale and want clarity on which financing path fits your specific situation before you make an offer, a buyer representative who works exclusively in veterinary acquisitions can walk you through the options in the context of the actual deal you’re evaluating — not in the abstract.
Frequently Asked Questions:
FAQ 1. What credit score do I need to qualify for an SBA loan for a veterinary practice?
Most SBA lenders look for 680 or above, though some will work with scores in the 650 range depending on the overall strength of the application—particularly the practice’s cash flow and the buyer’s post-closing liquidity. Credit score matters, but it rarely tells the whole story.
FAQ 2. Can seller financing and an SBA loan be used together in the same deal? Yes, and it’s done regularly. Most SBA lenders allow a seller note to cover up to 10% of the purchase price, provided the note is fully subordinated to the primary loan. The terms—interest rate, repayment schedule, and any deferral period—are negotiated between buyer and seller as part of the deal structure.
FAQ 3. How do I know which financing path is right for my situation?
It depends on three things: how much liquidity you have available for a down payment, how competitive the market is for the practice you’re pursuing, and whether the practice’s cash flow covers full bank financing on its own. A buyer with limited liquidity in a slower market is usually an SBA candidate. A buyer with stronger personal finances in a fast-moving market often benefits from the speed of conventional lending.
Final Thoughts:
Veterinary practice financing is rarely the most interesting part of buying a practice. But it’s the part that determines whether the deal happens at all and on what terms. Buyers who understand the four paths — and know which one fits their profile before they start negotiating—close faster, with fewer surprises, and at better terms than those who figure it out under pressure.
If you’re exploring veterinary clinics for sale near me or have a specific practice in mind, your financing strategy should be finalized before your offer is written—not after.
Explore how VSC supports buyers through every stage of the acquisition process at vetsalesconsulting.com.
