How to Finance a Subway Franchise in 2026
Subway's relatively low entry cost — $150K–$450K — makes SBA 7(a) the primary financing vehicle. Here's how lenders evaluate a Subway deal and what you need to get funded.
Key takeaways
- Total investment: $150K–$450K — one of the lowest entry points in QSR franchising
- Subway is on the SBA Franchise Directory — SBA 7(a) is the primary financing vehicle
- SBA 7(a) can cover up to $5M; most Subway deals fall well under $500K
- Equipment financing covers sandwich prep equipment, refrigeration, and POS separately
- Subway has a preferred-lender network through FRANdata partnerships
- Typical timeline: 45–75 days from complete application to funding
Subway's accessible entry cost — compared to most QSR franchise systems — makes it one of the more financeable franchise opportunities in the restaurant sector. The brand's positioning in inline strip-center spaces (rather than freestanding pads) keeps build-out costs manageable and makes real estate financing less complex. This guide focuses on how Subway franchises get financed — not the full startup cost breakdown (see the companion cost-to-start guide).
Subway total investment + what lenders look at
Total estimated initial investment per the current FDD runs $150K–$450K. The range is wide because location format (new build vs. existing transfer), local build-out costs, and equipment condition vary significantly. Lenders evaluating a Subway franchise deal focus on:
- Equity injection: SBA requires minimum 10%; Subway's own net-worth thresholds run $30K–$90K depending on market. Document liquid assets — not HELOC or borrowed funds.
- Existing unit revenue (if acquiring): Lenders underwrite trailing 12-month gross sales and DSCR. A DSCR of 1.25x is a common floor.
- Build-out cost documentation: Lenders want a signed lease or letter of intent, contractor bid, and equipment list before committing.
- Operator experience: Prior food-service or retail management experience is viewed favorably — Subway requires franchisees to actively manage the business.
- Personal credit: 650+ FICO is a common threshold for Subway SBA deals; stronger credit drives better rate pricing.
SBA 7(a) for Subway franchises
Subway is on the SBA Franchise Directory, which means lenders can skip the independent franchise agreement eligibility review. The SBA 7(a) program is the dominant financing vehicle for Subway deals:
- Maximum loan: $5M — Subway deals typically fall in the $100K–$400K financed range
- Terms: Up to 10 years for equipment and working capital; up to 25 years if real estate is included (rare for Subway's inline format)
- SBA Microloan: For lower-investment Subway builds, the SBA Microloan program provides up to $50K through nonprofit intermediaries — can supplement a primary SBA 7(a) or cover the gap
- Use of proceeds: Franchise fee ($15K), leasehold improvements, equipment, opening inventory, and working capital
- Rate: Competitive for loans in the $150K–$450K range — SBA caps the spread lenders can charge
SBA 504 for real estate and build-out
SBA 504 is less commonly used for Subway's inline strip-center model because 504 requires owner-occupied commercial real estate — most Subway locations operate on leases. The SBA 504 program becomes relevant only if a franchisee is purchasing a freestanding location or a mixed-use building where the Subway occupies a majority of the space.
Equipment financing for Subway
Sandwich prep units, refrigeration, bread ovens, POS systems, and ventilation equipment can be financed separately via equipment loans or leases. Equipment loans typically run 3–5 year terms at competitive rates, with the equipment as collateral. For an existing Subway transfer, lenders will assess equipment age and condition — older equipment may trigger a required upgrade that adds to total project cost.
Franchisor financing programs
Subway maintains a preferred-lender network facilitated through FRANdata — a franchise intelligence platform that lenders use to assess franchise brand health, franchisee default rates, and disclosure data. Subway's preferred lenders have experience with the brand's FDD, territory rules, and multi-unit structures, which can shorten underwriting timelines. Subway does not operate a direct in-house lending program, but franchisee development representatives can direct candidates toward experienced lenders.
Down payment and liquidity requirements
Subway's published net-worth requirements run $30K–$90K in liquid capital depending on the territory. SBA's minimum equity injection is 10% of total project cost. On a $250K build, that is $25K minimum from the borrower's own liquid assets. Subway is one of the more accessible QSR franchise systems on the capital requirements side — but lenders still want to see post-closing liquidity (typically 3 months of debt service in reserve) to confirm the borrower is not over-leveraged.
Timeline to funding
- Pre-qualification: Lender reviews financials, Subway franchise agreement summary, and site lease. 1–2 weeks.
- SBA application: Full SBA package assembled including Form 413, tax returns, build-out bids, and equipment list. 1–2 weeks.
- SBA approval: Conditional commitment issued. 3–5 weeks for SBA PLP lenders; longer for non-PLPs.
- Closing and funding: Legal and closing. 2–3 weeks post-approval. Total: 45–75 days from complete package.
Apply with ClearValue Lending
Apply at Find my match. Your file routes to one matched SBA-preferred lender in our network — your information does not go to multiple lenders simultaneously. Related: SBA 7(a) loan application walkthrough · SBA Microloan program.
Sources
- Subway is listed on the SBA Franchise Directory, enabling expedited lender franchisor eligibility review. — SBA Franchise Directory
- SBA 7(a) loans provide up to $5M for franchise startup and acquisition costs, with terms up to 10 years for equipment and working capital. — SBA 7(a) Loan Program
- The SBA Microloan program provides up to $50,000 through nonprofit intermediaries — a supplemental financing option for lower-investment franchise builds. — SBA Microloan Program
- The FTC Franchise Rule requires Subway's FDD to disclose all franchise fees, estimated initial investment ranges, and franchisee financial performance data. — FTC — Buying a Franchise: A Consumer Guide
- FDIC data shows SBA 7(a) is the primary financing mechanism for QSR franchise acquisitions in the $100K–$500K total investment range. — FDIC — Financial Institution Letters
What lenders look for in a Subway franchise application
Subway is listed on the SBA Franchise Directory, and at $229K–$522K it sits in the range where both SBA 7(a) and SBA Express loans are viable structures depending on project size. Key underwriting factors lenders evaluate:
- DSCR and revenue modeling: Subway's AUV (average unit volume) is approximately $430K–$480K nationally (per Subway FDD Item 19, 2023). Lenders underwrite year-one DSCR conservatively — typically 60–75% of system AUV for new builds in untested locations. Existing franchise transfers are underwritten on trailing 12-month store P&Ls, which are more bankable than pro formas.
- Equity injection: SBA requires a minimum 10% equity injection. Subway deals typically see lenders accept 10–15% equity at the lower investment range ($229K–$350K), with SBA Express loan structures for smaller builds. Larger builds or multi-unit agreements may require 20%.
- Royalty load stress test: Subway charges 8% royalty + 4.5% advertising fund = 12.5% total fee load on gross sales — one of the higher combined rates in QSR. Lenders run DSCR with the full fee load applied before confirming the deal is serviceable at conservative volume assumptions.
- Lease quality and term: Subway requires a 20-year franchise agreement, so lenders verify the lease term (plus options) matches the loan term. Short remaining lease terms on existing locations are a material underwriting concern — lenders will not close SBA loans where the lease can expire before the note matures.
- Transfer vs. new build: Acquiring an existing Subway unit (transfer) is the preferred path for SBA lenders because trailing revenue data is available. New builds require a site feasibility analysis, and lenders scrutinize competition density, traffic counts, and proximity to anchor tenants.
Deal structuring note
For new Subway builds at $229K–$350K, SBA Express loans (up to $500K, turnaround in 36 hours) are the most common structure — faster approval and simpler documentation than standard 7(a). Deals above $350K or multi-unit agreements typically use standard SBA 7(a). Subway's multi-unit development agreements require lenders to model total pipeline capital commitment, not just the first unit. Apply at Find my match.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get an SBA loan for a Subway franchise?Yes. Subway is on the SBA Franchise Directory, which streamlines the lender's franchisor eligibility review. SBA 7(a) is the most common financing vehicle for Subway franchise builds in the $150K–$450K range.
How much cash do I need to open a Subway franchise?Subway's published net-worth requirement is $30K–$90K in liquid capital depending on the market. SBA requires a minimum 10% equity injection from the borrower's own liquid assets. A $250K project requires at least $25K of your own cash.
Does Subway offer financing to franchisees?Subway does not operate a direct in-house lending program. The brand maintains relationships with preferred lenders through FRANdata. Franchisee development representatives can point you toward lenders experienced with Subway's FDD and deal structure.
How long does SBA financing take for a Subway franchise?Typically 45–75 days from a complete application package. SBA Preferred Lenders issue conditional commitments faster (3–5 weeks). Build-out and Subway's own approval process run in parallel — coordinate with your development representative early.
Can I use SBA financing for a Subway franchise transfer (existing unit)?Yes. SBA 7(a) can finance existing restaurant acquisitions. Lenders will underwrite the unit's trailing 12-month revenue — DSCR of 1.25x or better is the common threshold. Have the seller provide verified sales figures, not just estimates.