Dunkin' franchise investment runs $400K–$1.7M depending on format. SBA 7(a) is the primary financing vehicle — and Dunkin' has an active preferred-lender network. Here's how to structure the deal.
Dunkin' (formerly Dunkin' Donuts) is one of the most active franchise systems in the coffee-and-baked-goods QSR category, with a strong U.S. presence and an ongoing remodel and new-unit development program. The brand's investment range is broad because it spans multiple location formats — from freestanding drive-through locations to inline strip-center units to non-traditional formats (airports, colleges, gas stations). This guide covers how to finance a Dunkin' franchise, not the startup cost breakdown (see the companion cost-to-start guide for that).
Per the current Dunkin' FDD, total estimated initial investment runs $400K–$1.7M depending on format. Freestanding drive-through locations are at the top of the range; inline and non-traditional formats come in lower. Lenders evaluate:
Dunkin' is listed on the SBA Franchise Directory, enabling SBA 7(a) lenders to fast-track franchisor eligibility review. For most Dunkin' formats, 7(a) is the primary financing vehicle:
For freestanding Dunkin' locations where the franchisee is acquiring the land and building (owner-occupied), the SBA 504 program provides long-term, fixed-rate financing. A typical 504 structure: 50% conventional bank + 40% SBA 504 debenture + 10% borrower equity. The long-term fixed rate from the 504 debenture reduces payment volatility for a capital-intensive freestanding location. Most inline Dunkin' franchisees lease rather than own real estate, making 504 less applicable.
Espresso machines, brewers, warming equipment, refrigeration, drive-through technology, and POS systems can be financed via equipment loans or leases layered on top of the primary SBA 7(a). Equipment financing runs 3–7 year terms collateralized by the equipment. Dunkin' has an approved equipment list — lenders will want to see it to confirm the collateral is brand-compliant. For a remodel or existing unit acquisition where older equipment needs replacement, equipment financing is particularly useful for isolating that cost.
Dunkin' maintains an active preferred-lender program — a network of lenders with deep experience in Dunkin' franchise financing and familiarity with the FDD, development agreements, and construction protocols. These lenders have underwritten many Dunkin' deals and can move more efficiently than generalist SBA lenders who encounter the brand for the first time. Dunkin' does not offer direct in-house lending (no subsidized rates or corporate-backed loans), but franchisee development representatives can connect candidates with preferred-network lenders.
Dunkin' requires $250K–$500K in liquid assets depending on the size of your development agreement. SBA mandates a minimum 10% equity injection from liquid, non-borrowed funds. On a $700K freestanding unit, that means $70K minimum from personal liquid assets (SBA floor) — though many lenders require 15–20% for first-time franchisees. Post-closing, lenders want to see 3–6 months of debt service in reserve.
Apply at Find my match. Your file routes to one matched lender in our network — with experience in franchise SBA deals. Related: SBA 7(a) loan application walkthrough · SBA 504 loan explained.
Dunkin' is on the SBA Franchise Directory, and the wide investment range ($97K–$1.87M) reflects meaningful format differences — non-traditional kiosks vs. standalone drive-thru units require very different capital structures. Key underwriting factors lenders evaluate:
Drive-thru Dunkin' builds ($700K–$1.87M involving real estate) are candidates for SBA 504 layered with 7(a): the 504 finances the owner-occupied real estate and building (below-market fixed rate, 20-25yr term); the 7(a) covers equipment, leasehold improvements, and working capital. This structure reduces the blended interest rate and preserves SBA borrowing capacity for pipeline units under the development agreement. Apply at Find my match.
Yes. Dunkin' is on the SBA Franchise Directory, which streamlines lender franchisor eligibility review. SBA 7(a) is the primary vehicle for the $400K–$1.7M investment range. For freestanding locations with real estate, SBA 504 can be layered in.
Dunkin' maintains a preferred-lender network with experienced SBA franchise lenders — not a direct in-house lending program. There are no subsidized rates or corporate-backed loans. Preferred lenders know the FDD and development agreement structure, which speeds underwriting.
Dunkin' requires $250K–$500K in liquid assets depending on your development agreement. SBA's minimum equity injection is 10% of total project cost. Most lenders require 15–20% for first-time franchisees, plus a post-closing liquidity reserve.
SBA 7(a) has a $5M cap per borrower. Franchisees developing multiple units typically structure individual loans per unit or phase financing across the development timeline. A multi-unit development agreement can strengthen your overall file by demonstrating scale and commitment.
680+ is a common lender threshold for SBA franchise deals in the $400K–$1.7M range. Compensating factors — strong liquidity, prior food service experience, existing business cash flow — can offset a score below 700.