Partner Buyout Financing Nationwide, SBA 7(a) to Fund a Partner Buy-In or Buyout

⚖️ Financing Built for Partner Transitions
Partner Buy-In and Buyout Financing Move the Equity. Keep the Firm Whole.
Don’t Beg the Bank!
☂️ Banks hand out umbrellas when the sun is shining, not when you’re weathering the storm.
✔ SBA 7(a) · Partner buy-in · Buyout · Succession · All 50 states

I’m Kevin Kermeen, a nationwide commercial loan broker, not a bank. Partner buyout financing solves a problem every multi-owner firm eventually faces: equity has to change hands. A rising associate is ready to buy in, or a senior partner is retiring and needs to be bought out, but the buyer rarely has six or seven figures in cash, and draining the firm’s operating account to fund it is not an option. A conventional bank wants hard collateral, and a partnership interest is goodwill, so it balks. That is exactly what SBA 7(a) financing is built for: it underwrites the firm’s earnings to fund the buy-in or buyout over a long term with manageable payments, with a low down payment and often a seller note layered in. Law, accounting, advisory, an agency, the structure is the same. I match you to lenders who fund partner transitions.

$10K to $5M Conventional real estate All 50 states No upfront fees*
Partner buy-in and buyout financing nationwide, SBA 7(a) to fund a partner buy-in or buyout, with Kevin Kermeen, commercial loan broker Partner buyout financing nationwide, SBA 7(a) partner transitions PARTNER TRANSITION SNAPSHOT Move equity, keep firm whole ⚖️ Funding Range $10K to $5M* Partner Buy-In SBA 7(a) Partner Buyout Equipment Financing Coverage All 50 States One buy-in or a full buyout, I match it
$10K to $5M*
Funding Range
SBA 7(a)
Acquisition Workhorse
No 2-Yr
History Needed*
All 50
States
What It Funds

Partner Buy-In and Buyout Financing for Every Kind of Transition

Whether a new partner is buying in, a retiring partner is being bought out, or ownership is transitioning to the next generation, there’s a structure built for it. Here’s what partner buyout financing commonly covers.

🏷️

Partner Buy-In

Fund a rising associate or junior partner buying into the firm’s equity, underwritten on the firm’s earnings, with a low down payment.

🚀

Partner Buyout

Buy out a retiring or departing partner’s equity stake without draining the firm, financed on the firm’s earnings.

👤

Succession Transition

Transfer ownership from a founding generation to the next, often phased over time, with financing that bridges the buy-in.

🤝

Employee or Management Buy-Out

Fund a key employee or management team buying the firm from a departing owner, the cleanest internal transition.

🔨

Multi-Partner Restructure

Rebalance equity across several partners at once, or fund a group buying out a controlling owner, in one structured deal.

💵

Seller-Note Layering

Layer a seller note alongside SBA 7(a) so the departing partner finances part of the buyout and stays invested in the transition.

A Real Deal I Closed

Two Senior Associates Bought Out a Retiring Founder With SBA 7(a) and Kept the Firm Intact

A founding partner was ready to retire, and two senior associates wanted to buy out his majority stake and take over the firm. The equity was worth well into seven figures, almost entirely goodwill and client relationships, and neither buyer had that kind of cash. Their bank would not lend against a partnership interest, and using firm cash would have crippled operations.

They called me. I matched the buyers to SBA 7(a) partner buyout financing that underwrote the firm’s earnings rather than demanding collateral, with a low down payment, a long term, and a seller note from the retiring founder layered in. The two associates bought out the founder’s stake, the firm kept every client and employee, and the payments came comfortably out of the firm’s ongoing earnings.

That’s what a well-structured partner buyout looks like. Don’t Beg the Bank! Get funded instead.

SBA 7(a)
Acquisition
Cash Flow
Underwritten
Day One
Profitable
Your Funding Paths

Partner Buyout Financing, the Right Tool for Each Transition

Partner buyout financing isn’t one product. SBA 7(a) is the workhorse for the equity transfer, but a seller note, working capital for the transition, or a line of credit can round out the deal. Here are the paths. I match you to the one that fits, tap any to explore it.

Do You Qualify?

Qualifying for Partner Buyout Financing

A partner buyout is one of the deals SBA 7(a) was designed for, which is why a goodwill-based equity transfer that a conventional bank rejects is very financeable here. Lenders underwrite the firm’s earnings and the continuity of its clients and staff through the transition, not hard collateral. A profitable firm with a credible buyer, whether buying in or taking over, is a strong file. I qualify deals honestly.

✅ What helps you qualify

  • A partner buy-in or buyout in motion, with a valuation and the firm’s verifiable earnings.
  • A solid cash flow and decent credit, the foundation an SBA acquisition lender wants.
  • A target firm with solid, documented cash flow and verifiable client retention.
  • A down payment or contribution, which a parent or family member can help with.

💡 Straight talk

  • SBA 7(a) underwrites the firm’s earnings and continuity, not the buyer’s personal collateral.
  • A seller note from the departing partner can be layered in to bridge the price and ease the transition.
  • Credit is flexible, there’s no single hard FICO floor; stronger credit means better terms.
  • A past bank rejection does not disqualify you; the deal and your credit matter more.

Get Your Partner Buyout Financing Options

A quick, no-pressure pre-qualification. I personally review every submission, no call center, no junior rep.

1 · Your Goal
2 · You
3 · Contact

🔒 100% confidential. I never sell your information; I only share it with the partner lender(s) you’ve approved me to send it to. I call you directly, I never text. No upfront fees to me; I’m paid by the lender at closing.* Some partner lenders may require a commitment deposit when you accept their term sheet.

Got it. I’m on it.

Your partner buyout request landed in my inbox. I personally review every submission and most responses go out within one business hour.

Watch for a call from me, Kevin Kermeen, I call directly, I don’t text.

Need to talk now? Call me at (480) 915-8690
Rather talk first? 📞 Call Kevin (480) 915-8690 7 days a week · Arizona Time
Real Deals · Just Funded

Recent Partner Buyout Financing From My Desk

A snapshot of the partner buyout financing I match to lenders nationwide, transition by transition. Every firm and deal is different, yours starts with a conversation.

Just Funded

Partner Buyout Financing · Founder Exit

Two associates bought out a retiring founder with SBA 7(a) and a seller note, keeping the firm fully intact.

Just Funded

Partner Buy-In

A rising associate bought into the partnership with SBA 7(a) financing, paid from the firm’s earnings.

Just Funded

Management Buy-Out

A management team bought out a departing majority owner with SBA 7(a), phasing the transition over time.

Why Partners Choose Me

How I Match Partner Buyout Financing to the Right Lender

Partner transitions are specialized, and SBA 7(a) lenders differ on how comfortable they are with goodwill-based equity transfers and partnership structures. I work with many, so I match your partner buyout financing to a lender experienced with buy-ins and buyouts in your profession, structure any seller note around it, and review the options with you before you commit.

Here’s the reality of a partner transition, and why these deals stall at a conventional bank. Whether a rising associate is buying into the equity or a retiring partner is being bought out, the value being transferred is a share of the firm’s goodwill, clients and future earnings, not hardware a bank can repossess. The buyer rarely has the cash on hand, and draining the firm’s operating account to fund the buyout would cripple it. So the bank caps the loan or passes, even when the firm is highly profitable. SBA 7(a) financing exists precisely for this: it underwrites the firm’s earnings and the continuity of its clients and staff through the change, with a low down payment and a long term that keeps the payments affordable, and a seller note from the departing partner is often layered in so they finance part of the deal and stay invested in a smooth handoff. The same structure works for a single buy-in, a full buyout, a next-generation succession, or a management team buying out a controlling owner, across law firms, accounting firms, advisory practices, agencies and every other professional field. According to the U.S. Small Business Administration, its 7(a) program can be used to fund a change of business ownership, including a partner buyout.

The right structure depends on the deal size and whether a seller note or conventional layer belongs in the structure.SBA 7(a) loan, and broader options live across the SBA loan programs. The buy-in or buyout itself runs on an SBA 7(a) loan, the transition and any cash-flow smoothing on working capital or a business line of credit, and if the deal also includes buying out the firm’s building, the owner-occupied real estate piece fits SBA 504. If you want to own the building, an SBA 504 loan or commercial real estate loan gives long-term, fixed-rate terms. A brand-mandated renovation points to professional services working capital, and the ramp-up months are covered by working capital loans or a business line of credit.

So tell me about the transition, a partner buying in, a partner being bought out, a succession, or a management buy-out, and what profession the firm is in, and I’ll tell you honestly how the SBA 7(a) deal structures, whether a seller note belongs in it, and match you to a lender experienced with partner transitions. Buying a whole outside firm instead? See my practice acquisition financing. For your specific profession or other firm financing, see my professional services financing hub, or compare every option on my loan programs page. Don’t Beg the Bank! Get funded instead.

Sources: U.S. Small Business Administration, 7(a) loan program and 504 loan program.

Partner Buyout FAQ

Straight Answers Before You Apply

What is partner buyout financing?
Partner buyout financing is the funding used to move equity inside a firm, either a new partner buying into the ownership or a retiring or departing partner being bought out, most often through an SBA 7(a) loan. Because a partnership interest is goodwill and future earnings rather than hard collateral, SBA 7(a) underwrites the firm’s earnings and the continuity of its clients and staff, with a low down payment and a long term, and a seller note from the departing partner is often layered in. It works for a single buy-in, a full buyout, a next-generation succession, or a management buy-out, across every profession. I match you to lenders who fund partner transitions.
Why will an SBA 7(a) lender fund a deal my bank rejected?
Because they underwrite different things. A conventional bank lends against hard collateral it can seize, and a professional practice is mostly goodwill, clients and reputation, so the bank caps the loan or passes. SBA 7(a) was built for exactly this: it underwrites the target firm’s cash flow and the likelihood its clients stay after the sale, backed by a partial government guarantee that gives the lender comfort to fund a goodwill-based deal. That means a profitable practice you could never finance conventionally becomes very financeable, with a low down payment and a long term. The tradeoff is more paperwork and a longer timeline than a simple bank loan, which I manage with you.
How much do I need for a down payment on a buyout?
Less than most buyers expect, which is a big part of why SBA 7(a) dominates practice acquisitions. SBA 7(a) typically requires a modest equity injection from the buyer rather than the large down payment a conventional acquisition loan would demand, and a portion of that can often come from a seller note, where the seller finances part of the purchase price and effectively stays partly invested in a smooth transition. The exact figure depends on the deal size, the profession, your experience and the lender, so I give you a realistic number once I understand the target. The point is that a strong practice rarely fails to close for lack of a huge cash down payment.
Does partner buyout financing work for any profession?
Yes. The structure behind partner buyout financing is the same whether you are in a law firm, an accounting or CPA practice, a financial advisory firm, a marketing or consulting agency, an architecture or engineering firm, an insurance agency, or any other multi-owner professional firm. In every case the equity being transferred is goodwill and future earnings rather than hard assets, and SBA 7(a) underwrites the firm’s earnings and continuity. What changes from profession to profession is how the equity is valued and which lenders are most active, which is exactly where I add value by matching you to one experienced with partner transitions in your field. I help structure the buy-in or buyout and match you to the right lender.
Can a key employee or management team buy out the owner?
Yes, and an employee or management buy-out is one of the most fundable partner transitions there is. When the buyers already work in the firm, the lender sees built-in continuity: they know the clients, the staff and the operations, which sharply lowers the retention risk that worries lenders most in a goodwill-based deal. SBA 7(a) is the standard tool, underwriting the firm’s earnings with a low down payment and a long term, and the departing owner often carries a seller note to smooth the transition. Many firms use this structure to phase ownership to the next generation over time. I help you structure the buy-out and match you to a lender experienced with owner-to-employee transitions.
What does it cost to work with you?
Nothing up front to me. I am paid by the lender at closing, no application fees and no broker fees out of pocket. Some partner lenders may require a commitment deposit when you accept their term sheet, which is separate from any fee to me and disclosed before you commit. Don’t Beg the Bank! Let me match your partner buyout financing to the right lender.
Kevin Kermeen, nationwide commercial loan advisor at 75BizLoans.com
Why Work With Me

A Broker Who Gets Partner Transitions Funded

I’m Kevin Kermeen, the nationwide commercial loan broker behind 75BizLoans.com, not a bank and not a lead-selling portal. A conventional bank sees a partner buying a stake with no hard collateral and stops reading. I work with the SBA 7(a) lenders who underwrite a firm’s earnings and continuity to fund buy-ins and buyouts, let a seller note round out the structure, and understand partnership agreements, and matching you to one experienced in your profession is the whole point of working with me. I personally review every application, I call you directly, and I never text. For program details, see the SBA’s 7(a) loan program.

Own Your Share.
Don’t Beg the Bank!

Get Funded Instead.

Banks hand out umbrellas when the sun is shining, not when you’re weathering the storm … and they’ll reject the partner buyout that would secure your firm’s future, just because it lacks hard collateral. I match you to partner buyout financing built for goodwill-based equity transfers … SBA 7(a) underwritten on the firm’s earnings, a low down payment, a long term, and a seller note when it fits. Buy into the partnership, buy out a retiring partner, or fund a succession. Get a same-day callback from a broker who reviews every deal himself.

Partner buyout financing is most often arranged through SBA 7(a) loans, which are government-backed and generally capped at $5 million, with their own eligibility, terms and timelines set by the SBA, and may be paired with a seller note from the departing partner. SBA 504 applies only to an owner-occupied real estate portion if a buyout includes the firm’s building. Down payment, rates, terms and funding timelines vary by lender, profession, deal size, creditworthiness and the firm’s earnings and continuity; all figures are illustrative and not a commitment to lend, and nothing here is legal, tax or financial advice. No upfront fees refers to fees payable to 75BizLoans.com; I am paid by the lender at closing. Some partner lenders may require a commitment deposit when you accept their term sheet.

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