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Subordinated Debt Financing

Subordinated debt financing, also called mezzanine capital, provides growth capital that sits between your senior debt and equity. It allows you to access significant funding without diluting your ownership stake. Lenders providing subordinated debt accept a lower priority position in the repayment hierarchy in exchange for higher returns, giving your business a powerful tool for acquisitions, expansion, management buyouts, and large capital projects. Rise connects established businesses with subordinated debt solutions designed for strategic growth.

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What Is Subordinated Debt?

Subordinated debt is a form of financing that ranks below senior debt (like bank loans) in repayment priority but above equity. If a business defaults, senior lenders are repaid first, then subordinated lenders, then equity holders. This higher risk position is why subordinated debt carries higher interest rates than senior loans.

Also known as mezzanine debt or junior debt, subordinated financing is typically used by established businesses for strategic purposes: funding acquisitions, financing management buyouts, supporting major expansion projects, or bridging the gap between what senior lenders will provide and the total capital needed.

The key advantage over equity financing is that you retain full ownership of your business: no shares, no board seats, no profit sharing. Unlike a standard long-term loan or SBA loan, subordinated debt lenders are often more flexible on repayment structure, sometimes offering interest-only periods before principal repayment begins.

Requirements to Qualify for Subordinated Debt

Personal FICO Score

680+

Subordinated debt is a sophisticated product for established businesses with strong financial profiles. Higher credit standards reflect the complexity and size of these transactions.

Annual Revenue

$500,000+

Subordinated debt is designed for businesses with significant revenue. This is not a startup product; lenders need confidence in your ability to service both senior and subordinated obligations.

Time in Business

3+ years

Lenders require a substantial operating track record. Your financial statements, growth trajectory, and management experience are closely evaluated.

Existing Senior Debt

Typically required

Subordinated debt is usually layered on top of existing senior financing. The total capital structure, senior plus subordinated, must be sustainable for your cash flow.

Subordinated debt is best suited for established, profitable businesses pursuing strategic growth. If your business is earlier-stage or needs general working capital, a business line of credit or term loan may be a better starting point.

How Subordinated Debt Works

Fills the Gap Between Senior Debt and Equity

When your senior lender won't fund the full amount you need, subordinated debt provides the additional capital without requiring you to sell equity. It bridges the gap between what banks will lend and the total capital your project requires.

Higher Interest, Greater Flexibility

Subordinated lenders charge higher interest rates (typically 12% to 20%) because they accept a lower repayment priority. In exchange, they often offer more flexible structures, including interest-only periods, deferred principal, or payment-in-kind options.

Structured for Strategic Transactions

Subordinated debt is typically used for acquisitions, management buyouts, expansion projects, and capital restructuring. The terms are negotiated based on the specific deal, not off-the-shelf product parameters.

Repaid After Senior Debt

In the repayment hierarchy, senior lenders are repaid first. Subordinated lenders are next. Equity holders are last. This priority structure means subordinated lenders take on more risk, which is why they require higher returns and stronger borrower profiles.

Explore Subordinated Debt Options

Subordinated financing can unlock the capital your business needs for its next strategic move. Talk to Rise about structuring the right solution. The initial consultation won't impact your credit score.

Pros & Cons of Subordinated Debt

Pros

No Equity Dilution

Access significant capital without giving up ownership shares, board seats, or profit participation.

Bridges Senior Debt Gaps

When your bank won't fund the full amount, subordinated debt provides the additional layer of capital needed to complete the transaction.

Flexible Repayment Structure

Interest-only periods, deferred principal, and customized schedules give your business breathing room during the investment phase.

Enables Strategic Growth

Fund acquisitions, buyouts, expansions, and capital projects that senior debt alone cannot support.

Tax-Deductible Interest

Unlike equity returns, interest payments on subordinated debt are typically tax-deductible, reducing the effective cost of capital.

Cons

Higher Interest Rates

Rates of 12% to 20% are significantly higher than senior debt products like SBA loans or long-term loans. The cost reflects the lender's subordinated position.

Complex Documentation

Subordinated debt transactions involve inter-creditor agreements, subordination agreements, and detailed financial covenants. Legal and advisory costs can be substantial.

Requires Strong Financials

This is not an accessible product for most small businesses. You need significant revenue, proven profitability, and a management team capable of executing the funded strategy.

Alternatives to Subordinated Debt

  • Senior debt with lower interest rates (6% to 15%) and longer repayment terms (1 to 10+ years)
  • Simpler documentation and faster closing than subordinated debt transactions
  • Requires strong credit (650+) and 2+ years in business, but lower thresholds than mezzanine capital
  • Best for businesses that can secure the full amount needed through a single senior lender
  • No inter-creditor agreements or subordination complexity, just a straightforward loan structure
  • Government-backed loans with the lowest interest rates available for small businesses
  • Up to $5,000,000 with terms as long as 25 years for real estate
  • Multiple programs (7(a), 504, Microloans) for different business needs and sizes
  • Requires strong credit (680+), 2+ years in business, and extensive documentation
  • Best for established businesses willing to wait for the lowest cost of capital
  • Revolving access to capital: draw funds as needed and repay to restore your limit
  • More accessible qualification than subordinated debt, with a 600+ credit score and 1+ year in business
  • Ideal for ongoing working capital needs rather than one-time strategic transactions
  • Faster approval and simpler structure than mezzanine financing arrangements
  • Best for businesses needing flexible, recurring access to capital rather than a large lump sum

Frequently Asked Questions About

Subordinated Debt Financing

Subordinated debt is a form of business financing that ranks below senior debt (like bank loans) in the repayment hierarchy but above equity. If a business defaults, senior lenders are repaid first, then subordinated lenders, then equity holders. Because of this lower priority position, subordinated debt carries higher interest rates than senior loans, typically 12% to 20%. It is also known as mezzanine debt, junior debt, or second lien financing.

Trusted by Small Businesses Across the USA

Fast Approval

As Little As 2 Hours

Funding Available

$5K to $5M

Businesses Funded

Across All 50 States

Fund Your Next Strategic Move

Whether you're acquiring a competitor, executing a management buyout, or funding a major expansion, subordinated debt gives you the capital you need without giving up ownership. Rise connects established businesses with mezzanine lenders who understand strategic transactions.