On June 1, 2025, the Small Business Administration issued SOP 50 10 8, a Standard Operating Procedure that fundamentally changed how personal guarantees work in franchise acquisitions. If you're buying, selling, or financing a franchise, these changes affect your deal structure, your equity requirements, and your personal liability.
This article breaks down the key changes, what they mean for franchise operators, and how to prepare your financials to navigate the new rules.
The Core Change: Personal Guarantees Are Now Required for Partial Equity Retention
Under the old rules, sellers of franchises could retain equity (up to 19%) without personally guaranteeing the SBA loan. That exception is gone.
Here's the new rule: Anyone retaining equity in a partial change of ownership must now personally guarantee the SBA loan for at least 2 years—including sellers.
This applies whether you're:
- A seller staying on as a minority owner
- An existing owner bringing in a co-buyer
- An investor with a stake in the location
- Any party retaining equity in the business
The only exception is a full ownership transfer. If you're selling 100% of your franchise to a new buyer, and your ownership stake drops from majority to zero, the new personal guarantee requirement doesn't apply to you (unless you retain any remaining equity).
Seller Notes Are Now Strictly "Full Standby"
If a seller is financing part of the transaction (carrying a note), the rules have tightened significantly.
New Seller Note Requirements
Full Standby Status: Seller notes must have zero payments for the entire SBA loan term (typically 10 years).
Equity Injection Cap: Seller notes can represent no more than 50% of the total required equity injection.
No Partial Payback: Even if the SBA loan is paid off, the seller note must remain junior and subordinated to any other debt.
This fundamentally changes seller-financed deals. Many operators used to structure deals where a seller would receive payments over 3-5 years. That's no longer possible under SOP 50 10 8 if SBA financing is involved.
What This Means for Deal Structure
A franchise acquisition that might have looked like this:
- $300k purchase price
- $100k buyer equity injection
- $100k seller note (paid over 3 years)
- $100k SBA loan
Now needs to be restructured as:
- $300k purchase price
- $100k buyer equity injection
- $50k seller note (full standby, 10+ years)
- $50k additional buyer equity or alternative financing
- $100k SBA loan
This puts more pressure on the buyer to come to the table with cash or find alternative financing sources.
Full Ownership Transfers Have a Different Rule
Here's the one exception in SOP 50 10 8 that provides some flexibility:
If the ownership transfer is 100% complete (the seller has zero remaining equity), investors with less than 20% equity don't need personal guarantees.
This exception only works if:
- The seller exits completely
- All minority stakeholders have less than 20% ownership
- There is no partial change of ownership (no seller staying on in any capacity)
For a complete exit scenario, this can simplify the personal guarantee requirements. But for any deal where existing parties retain equity, the requirements are stricter.
Why the SBA Made This Change
The SBA tightened personal guarantee requirements because of increased lender risk. Franchise operators who own multiple locations, carry multiple debts, and have complex financial structures were defaulting at higher rates. By requiring personal guarantees from anyone with skin in the game, the SBA aims to align incentives and reduce default risk.
From a lender's perspective, this makes sense. If you're retaining equity, you have a financial incentive to make the business succeed. The SBA wants personal guarantees to back that incentive.
From an operator's perspective, it means you need to think carefully about:
- Whether you really want to retain equity in a deal
- The full personal liability you're taking on (for 2+ years minimum)
- How this affects your other business interests and personal net worth
Preparing Your Financials for SBA Scrutiny Under SOP 50 10 8
The new personal guarantee requirement means SBA lenders are going to scrutinize your financials more carefully. Here's what you need to have ready:
Exit-Ready Books
Your bookkeeping needs to meet lender standards from day one. This means:
- Clean, reconciled general ledger with no unresolved discrepancies
- Consistent chart of accounts across all locations (if multi-unit)
- Location-level P&L statements showing true unit economics
- Accurate, timely profit and loss statements (not tax returns)
- A clear audit trail for all major transactions
Personal Financial Statements
When you personally guarantee an SBA loan, the lender wants to know your personal net worth. You'll need:
- A detailed personal financial statement (PFS) listing all assets and liabilities
- Proof of asset values (recent appraisals, bank statements, investment statements)
- Documentation of any existing guarantees or contingent liabilities
- Personal tax returns for the last 2-3 years
Debt Service Coverage Documentation
The lender will want to confirm that your business can actually service the SBA debt. Prepare:
- Trailing 12-month profit and loss (most recent actual data)
- Detailed cash flow projections for the next 3-5 years
- A clear breakdown of all business debt obligations
- Confirmation of whether the business can support debt service from operations
Entity Structure Documentation
Multi-unit operators especially need to document:
- Clear ownership percentages across all entities
- Explanation of why equity is structured the way it is
- Consolidated financials showing how all locations roll up to entity level
- Any inter-company transactions clearly documented
Why Exit-Ready Financials Matter More Than Ever
Under the old rules, you could sometimes negotiate around weak financials. Under SOP 50 10 8, that's much harder. The personal guarantee requirement means lenders are taking more personal risk, and they want ironclad proof that your business can service the debt.
Exit-ready financials means:
- You can close a financing deal faster (lenders spend less time verifying accuracy)
- You get better terms (cleaner books = lower perceived risk = better rates)
- You reduce the chance of loan denial or conditions that blow up your deal
- You have the financial visibility to actually run your business well
The operators who maintain books to due diligence standards from day one won't have to scramble when an SBA financing opportunity appears. The operators with messy books will either face delays, higher costs, or denial.
Key Takeaways for Franchise Operators
SOP 50 10 8 requires personal guarantees from anyone retaining equity in a partial change of ownership. Seller notes must be full standby (10-year term, zero payments) and capped at 50% of equity injection. Only full ownership transfers with no remaining seller equity are exempt.
Here's what you need to do:
- Understand your equity retention. If you're staying in the deal with equity, you're personally guaranteeing the SBA loan. Make sure you want that liability.
- Restructure seller financing. If you're a seller, work with your buyer and lender to restructure notes as full standby with 10-year terms.
- Tighten your financials. SBA lenders will scrutinize your books more carefully. Make sure your bookkeeping meets lender standards.
- Document your net worth. If you're guaranteeing debt, prepare a clean personal financial statement with supporting documentation.
- Plan for cash flow. Understand whether your business can actually service the debt from operations.
The new rules aren't designed to kill deals—they're designed to ensure that people with skin in the game are fully committed to making those deals work.