Franchisees are some of the most motivated SBA loan applicants — they have a proven business model, a recognizable brand, and often the training and support of a national franchisor behind them. Many assume that strength makes them a natural fit for SBA financing. And often it does. But there's a requirement most franchisees don't know about until they're deep into the application process — and it can stop everything cold.
If your franchise brand is not listed on the SBA Franchise Directory, your loan cannot proceed. Not won't proceed easily. Cannot proceed at all — regardless of your credit score, your DSCR, or how strong your financial profile looks.
The SBA Franchise Directory — What It Is and Why It Exists
The SBA maintains a public database of all franchise brands that have been reviewed and approved for SBA financing. It is called the SBA Franchise Directory, and it is the gatekeeper for every SBA loan to a franchisee.
The Directory exists because franchise agreements vary enormously. Some give franchisees genuine operational independence. Others give the franchisor so much control over the business that the franchisee is effectively an employee — which would make the business an ineligible passive entity under SBA rules. Before the Directory existed, every SBA lender had to review franchise agreements independently to make this determination. The result was inconsistency and delay. The Directory standardizes the process: if your brand is on the list and marked eligible, the lender can proceed without reviewing your franchise agreement at all.
What Counts as a "Franchise" Under SBA Rules?
The SBA uses the Federal Trade Commission's definition of franchise — which is broader than most people expect. You don't need the word "franchise" in your agreement for the FTC definition to apply. License agreements, dealer agreements, jobber agreements, and similar arrangements can all qualify as franchises under the FTC standard if they meet certain criteria around fees, trademarks, and control.
This matters because some business owners operate under what they think of as a simple licensing or distribution agreement — and don't realize it may be treated as a franchise for SBA purposes. If there's any doubt, check the Directory first before spending time on an application that can't proceed.
Gas stations with distributor or fuel supply agreements, and new car dealers with manufacturer agreements, are specifically included in the FTC franchise definition per SBA SOP 50 10 8 — even though they're not typically described as franchises. If you operate a gas station or auto dealership and are seeking SBA financing, your agreement must be on the Directory before your application can move forward.
How to Check the Directory
What If Your Brand Isn't on the Directory?
A brand not being on the Directory doesn't mean it's ineligible — it may simply mean it hasn't been submitted for review yet. Many smaller or newer franchise concepts haven't gone through the SBA's review process. This is where your franchisor needs to get involved.
To add a brand to the Directory, the franchisor must submit the franchise agreement, Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD), and all other documents franchisees are required to sign to franchise@sba.gov. The SBA reviews submissions in the order received. Once approved, the SBA issues an SBA Franchise Identifier Code and the brand is added to the Directory.
What Lenders Look for Once Your Brand Is on the Directory
Once your brand clears the Directory check, the rest of the SBA eligibility evaluation proceeds normally. Lenders will evaluate your personal credit, business cash flow, time in business, and DSCR using the same framework they apply to any SBA 7(a) applicant.
There is one additional factor that applies specifically to franchises: lenders will note whether any conditions are attached to your brand's Directory listing. The most common is a requirement that the business must be open to all customers on a nondiscriminatory basis — something the lender will verify through your franchise agreement. If your franchisor's agreement includes discriminatory hiring or service restrictions, the brand would not be eligible for the Directory in the first place.
Multiple Agreements — A Hidden Trap
Some business owners operate under more than one agreement — for example, a franchisee who also has a separate equipment rental agreement with a vendor, or a business that carries both a primary franchise and a secondary product line under a different brand. Per SBA SOP 50 10 8, if any of your agreements meet the FTC definition of a franchise and any one of them is not on the Directory, your application cannot proceed — even if your primary franchise is fully eligible.
This catches people off guard. If you operate under multiple agreements of any kind, have your lender review all of them before starting the application process.
The Bottom Line for Franchisees
SBA financing is available to franchisees — and it's often an excellent fit, given the proven business model and established brand support. But the Directory check is non-negotiable. Before you pull a single document, run a credit check, or contact a lender, spend five minutes on the SBA's website confirming your brand is listed and eligible.
If it is — great. Move forward with confidence. If it isn't — contact your franchisor immediately and find out whether they've submitted for review and what the timeline looks like. Don't let a fixable administrative step become a surprise that derails your financing months into the process.
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