Frequently Asked Questions2026-01-31T17:21:14-05:00

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Business Line of Credit FAQs

What is a business line of credit?2025-10-25T18:37:32-05:00

A flexible funding account with a set limit you can draw from, repay, and draw again. You pay interest only on what you use.

How is it different from a term loan?2025-10-25T18:39:27-05:00

A term loan is a one-time lump sum with fixed payments; a line of credit is revolving—use it as needed for short-term cash needs.

Who qualifies for a line of credit?2025-10-25T18:39:53-05:00

Typically: 6–24+ months in business, consistent revenue/cash flow, and acceptable business/personal credit. Stronger profiles get better limits and rates.

Do I need a personal guarantee?2025-10-25T18:40:16-05:00

Often yes for small businesses. Some asset-based lines may reduce or waive it, but expect tighter terms.

Is it secured or unsecured?2025-10-25T18:40:40-05:00

Both exist. Many lines include a blanket lien (UCC-1) on business assets; unsecured options rely more on cash flow and credit strength.

How are rates set—and are they fixed or variable?2025-10-25T18:41:02-05:00

Rates depend on revenue, credit, industry risk, and collateral. Many lines are variable (e.g., Prime/SOFR + margin); some offer fixed pricing for a period.

What fees should I expect?2025-10-25T18:45:25-05:00

Possible fees: origination, draw/transaction, annual/maintenance, late/NSF, and wire/ACH. Many lines have no prepayment penalties—confirm your agreement.

How do draws and repayments work?2025-10-25T18:45:46-05:00

Request a draw via portal; funds arrive by ACH/wire. Payments are typically weekly or monthly; interest accrues on outstanding principal only.

How fast can I get approved and access funds?2025-10-25T18:46:11-05:00

Simple files can be same-day to a few business days. Once open, ACH draws often land in 1–2 business days; wires can be same day (fees may apply).

Will applying or using the line affect my credit?2025-10-25T18:46:30-05:00

Pre-qual may be a soft pull; final approval usually involves a hard pull. On-time usage can help build business credit when lenders report.

Short-Term Business Loan FAQs

What is a short-term business loan?2025-12-31T12:02:08-05:00

A one-time lump-sum business loan repaid on a fixed schedule over a short horizon (usually 3–24 months).

What are the best uses—and who is it for?2025-11-01T21:54:26-05:00

Short, high-ROI needs like inventory buys, bridging receivables/payables, seasonal stock, marketing pushes, or small equipment—when you want predictable payments.

How is it different from a line of credit or an MCA?2025-11-01T21:54:55-05:00

LOC = revolving (draw/repay repeatedly).
MCA = variable % of sales on purchased receivables.
Short-term loan = lump sum with fixed payments and set end date.

What terms and amounts are typical?2025-11-01T21:55:53-05:00

Terms commonly 6–18 months (range ~3–24). Amounts often tied to cash-flow—about 50–150% of average monthly deposits.

How is cost priced and what fees should I expect?2025-11-25T23:41:50-05:00

Lenders quote APR or a factor rate (e.g., 1.15). Compare total dollar payback, effective APR, and fees (origination, late/NSF, ACH).

What do I need to qualify?2025-11-01T21:56:42-05:00

Typical minimums: 6–12 months in business, $100k–$300k+ annual revenue, and ~550–650 FICO (varies by lender/industry).

Is collateral or a personal guaranty required?2025-11-01T21:57:12-05:00

Often a UCC-1 blanket lien on business assets and a personal guaranty for unsecured structures; specifics vary by offer.

What documents are required—and how fast is funding?2025-11-01T21:57:39-05:00

Usually application, IDs, 3–6 months of business bank statements, and a voided check. Approvals can be same-day; funding as fast as the next business day after signing.

How are payments structured?2025-11-01T21:58:44-05:00

Fixed daily or weekly ACH debits (sometimes bi-weekly or monthly). This aids planning but requires steady cash flow.

Can I repay early, and what are the risks?2025-11-01T21:59:10-05:00

Some lenders offer prepayment discounts; others don’t—get the payoff policy in writing. Key risks: over-borrowing, cash-flow strain from frequent debits, stacking multiple loans, and restrictive covenants.

Revenue-Based Financing FAQs

What is revenue-based financing (RBF)?2025-11-02T01:17:49-05:00

Growth capital you repay as a fixed percentage of future revenue until a pre-agreed cap (e.g., 1.3×–1.8× the amount funded) is reached.

How is RBF different from a loan or equity?2025-11-02T01:18:17-05:00

Loans have fixed payments and interest; RBF payments flex with revenue. Equity sells ownership; RBF doesn’t dilute (though some deals include small warrants).

Who is RBF best for, and typical use cases?2025-11-02T01:19:43-05:00

Businesses with predictable revenue and healthy margins (SaaS, subscription, e-commerce). Common uses: inventory, marketing/CAC, working capital for repeatable growth loops.

How much can I qualify for and what are typical terms?2025-11-02T01:19:22-05:00

Often a multiple of monthly revenue/GMV or MRR (for SaaS). Typical share rate: ~1%–10% of revenue; repayment cap: ~1.2×–2.0×; soft term: 12–48 months with a long-stop date.

How does pricing work—and how do I compare offers?2025-11-02T01:20:05-05:00

Cost is set by the cap multiple. Compare total dollar payback, expected payoff time, share rate, fees, and any long-stop/balloon rules; you can model an implied APR based on your revenue forecast.

What do providers look at to approve me?2025-11-02T01:20:29-05:00

Revenue scale and stability, margins, churn/retention (for SaaS), LTV/CAC, cohort performance, channel concentration, and connected data from bank/PSPs/accounting.

What documents/data are required?2025-11-02T01:20:52-05:00

IDs, bank statements, read-only connections to payment processors (Stripe/Shopify/Amazon/PayPal), accounting (QuickBooks/Xero), and basic financials. Personal guarantees/collateral are less common but possible.

How are payments calculated and collected?2025-11-02T01:21:15-05:00

You remit the agreed % of revenue (monthly is common; some weekly/daily) via automated ACH. Payments rise when sales rise and fall when sales dip—seasonality extends or shortens the payoff.

Can I repay early?2025-11-25T23:43:59-05:00

Many contracts require the remaining balance up to the cap regardless of timing (limited prepay discounts). If you haven’t hit the cap by the long-stop date, a residual/balloon may be due—confirm in writing.

What are the key risks and red flags?2025-11-02T01:21:56-05:00

Over-committing revenue share, stacking multiple RBFs, opaque “revenue” definitions, aggressive remedies, high caps, heavy fees, or strict long-stop clauses. Ensure terms align with margins, seasonality, and cash buffers.

Merchant Cash Advance FAQs

What is a Merchant Cash Advance (MCA)?2025-11-02T21:01:54-05:00

It’s an upfront lump sum in exchange for a fixed percentage (“holdback”) of your future sales until a set total payback (factor/multiple) is reached.

How is an MCA different from a loan?2025-11-02T21:02:21-05:00

An MCA isn’t a loan with interest and amortization; it’s a purchase of receivables with variable, revenue-linked remittances and a fixed total payback.

What do “factor rate” and “holdback” mean?2025-11-02T21:02:47-05:00

Factor rate (e.g., 1.35) sets the total you’ll repay (funded × factor). Holdback is the % of sales remitted (e.g., 8%–15%) until you hit that total.

How are payments collected?2025-11-02T21:03:15-05:00

Either via daily/weekly ACH debits (with periodic “true-ups”) or a processor split that diverts the holdback % from your card batches automatically.

How fast can I get funded and what’s required?2025-11-02T21:03:38-05:00

Approvals can be same day with basic docs: application, IDs, 3–6 months of bank/processor statements, and a voided check.

Who qualifies (and what helps approval)?2025-11-02T21:04:00-05:00

Typically 3–12+ months in business, consistent monthly revenue/deposits, limited NSFs, and stable average balances. Personal credit matters but revenue health matters more.

How do MCAs affect cash flow?2025-11-02T21:04:20-05:00

Remittances rise when sales rise and fall when sales dip. Ensure the holdback fits your margins and seasonality so you can cover COGS and operating expenses.

Can I repay early or get a discount?2025-11-02T21:04:44-05:00

Some funders offer early-pay discounts, but many require the remaining balance up to the factor—confirm the payoff policy in writing.

What are the main risks and red flags?2025-11-02T21:05:05-05:00

High total cost, stacking multiple positions, weak/absent reconciliation language, aggressive remedies (e.g., COJ clauses), and hidden fees. Read the contract carefully.

What are good alternatives to consider?2025-11-02T21:05:29-05:00

Short-term term loans (fixed payments), business lines of credit (revolving, often cheaper), revenue-based financing (broader revenue definition, capped payback), or invoice/equipment financing depending on your use case.

Equipment Funding FAQs

What is equipment funding?2025-11-04T00:38:04-05:00

Financing (loan or lease) used to acquire business equipment—secured by the equipment itself and repaid over time from your cash flow.

What kinds of equipment can be financed?2025-11-04T00:38:25-05:00

New/used machinery, vehicles, medical/dental devices, construction gear, restaurant/kitchen equipment, IT/servers, POS systems, and more (including many soft costs like installation and taxes).

Loan vs. lease—what’s the difference?2025-11-04T00:38:57-05:00
  • Loan: you own the asset; fixed payments; interest; lien on equipment.
    Lease: you pay to use the asset; options at end (FMV, 10% option, or $1 buyout); often lower payments during term.
What are typical terms and amounts?2025-11-04T00:39:20-05:00

Ticket sizes from ~$10k to multi-million; terms ~24–84 months (sometimes longer for heavy equipment), usually fixed payments.

How are rates/costs quoted?2025-11-04T00:39:44-05:00

Loans show APR; leases often show a payment “factor.” Always compare total dollar cost, implied APR, fees, and end-of-term (EOT) options.

What do I need to qualify?2025-11-04T00:40:08-05:00

Time in business (stronger ≥2 years), stable revenue/bank statements, reasonable credit (personal guaranty common), and a vendor quote/invoice with make/model/serials.

How fast can I get funded and what docs are required?2025-11-04T00:40:32-05:00

Simple deals can fund in 24–72 hours after approval & delivery/acceptance. Typical docs: application, IDs, bank statements/financials (depth by size), insurance binder, vendor invoice.

Can I finance soft costs or used equipment?2025-11-04T00:40:51-05:00

Often yes. Many programs include shipping, installation, and taxes; used gear is financeable with inspections and potentially shorter terms or higher down payments.

What happens at end of term?2025-11-04T00:41:22-05:00

Depends on structure:

  • $1 buyout: you own it.
  • Fixed-percent (e.g., 10%): purchase at set residual.
  • FMV: buy at fair market value, return, or renew. (Watch for evergreen auto-renewals—give notice on time.)
What are key risks and best practices?2025-11-04T00:41:54-05:00
  • Risks: evergreen clauses, unclear FMV, hidden fees, mismatched term vs asset life, under-insuring, and obsolescence.
  • Best practices: match term to useful life, verify fees/EOT in writing, maintain insurance, keep maintenance logs, and get UCC/title releases at payoff.

SBA 7(a) FAQs

What is an SBA 7(a) Working Capital loan?2025-11-04T21:14:36-05:00

A lender-originated business loan partially guaranteed by the SBA, used for day-to-day operating needs (inventory, payroll, marketing, etc.).

How is it different from a conventional bank loan?2025-11-04T21:14:56-05:00

Similar underwriting, but the SBA guaranty lets lenders approve more files, offer longer terms, and cap pricing within SBA limits.

What can (and can’t) I use the funds for?2025-11-04T21:15:24-05:00
  • Allowed: operating expenses, inventory, payroll, rent, marketing, and eligible refinancing.
  • Not allowed: personal use, speculative/passive investments, illegal purposes, certain tax issues without an approved plan.
What are typical loan amounts, rates, and terms?2025-11-04T21:15:42-05:00

Amounts range from small to multi-million (subject to program caps). Rates are benchmark (e.g., Prime/SOFR) + SBA-capped spread. Terms for working capital commonly up to 10 years.

Is it a term loan or a line of credit?2025-11-04T21:15:58-05:00

Either. You can do a term loan or a revolving/non-revolving working capital line under CAPLines (e.g., Working Capital CAPLine).

What collateral and guarantees are required?2025-11-04T21:16:15-05:00

Expect a blanket UCC-1 on business assets; lenders take available collateral when prudent. Personal guarantees are typical for owners ≥20%.

Who qualifies—and what do lenders look for?2025-11-04T21:16:35-05:00

For-profit U.S. small businesses meeting SBA size standards, with adequate cash flow, reasonable leverage, owner experience, and satisfactory credit. Lenders test DSCR (often ≥1.15x) and “credit elsewhere.”

What documentation do I need?2025-11-04T21:16:53-05:00

SBA forms, ownership/BOI info, 3 years business & personal tax returns (as applicable), YTD financials, projections (for startups/growth), bank statements, AR/AP agings, and a debt schedule.

How long does it take to get approved and funded?2025-11-04T21:17:14-05:00

PLP (Preferred Lender) files can move in weeks; complex files or non-PLP submissions can take longer due to SBA concurrence and third-party checks.

Can I refinance higher-cost debt?2025-11-26T00:01:29-05:00

Often yes—if it provides a documented “substantial benefit” (better rate/term/cash flow) and meets SBA refinancing rules; you’ll need payoff letters and compliance with SBA guidelines.

Business Line of Credit FAQs

What is a business line of credit?2025-10-25T18:37:32-05:00

A flexible funding account with a set limit you can draw from, repay, and draw again. You pay interest only on what you use.

How is it different from a term loan?2025-10-25T18:39:27-05:00

A term loan is a one-time lump sum with fixed payments; a line of credit is revolving—use it as needed for short-term cash needs.

Who qualifies for a line of credit?2025-10-25T18:39:53-05:00

Typically: 6–24+ months in business, consistent revenue/cash flow, and acceptable business/personal credit. Stronger profiles get better limits and rates.

Do I need a personal guarantee?2025-10-25T18:40:16-05:00

Often yes for small businesses. Some asset-based lines may reduce or waive it, but expect tighter terms.

Is it secured or unsecured?2025-10-25T18:40:40-05:00

Both exist. Many lines include a blanket lien (UCC-1) on business assets; unsecured options rely more on cash flow and credit strength.

How are rates set—and are they fixed or variable?2025-10-25T18:41:02-05:00

Rates depend on revenue, credit, industry risk, and collateral. Many lines are variable (e.g., Prime/SOFR + margin); some offer fixed pricing for a period.

What fees should I expect?2025-10-25T18:45:25-05:00

Possible fees: origination, draw/transaction, annual/maintenance, late/NSF, and wire/ACH. Many lines have no prepayment penalties—confirm your agreement.

How do draws and repayments work?2025-10-25T18:45:46-05:00

Request a draw via portal; funds arrive by ACH/wire. Payments are typically weekly or monthly; interest accrues on outstanding principal only.

How fast can I get approved and access funds?2025-10-25T18:46:11-05:00

Simple files can be same-day to a few business days. Once open, ACH draws often land in 1–2 business days; wires can be same day (fees may apply).

Will applying or using the line affect my credit?2025-10-25T18:46:30-05:00

Pre-qual may be a soft pull; final approval usually involves a hard pull. On-time usage can help build business credit when lenders report.

Short-Term Business Loan FAQs

What is a short-term business loan?2025-12-31T12:02:08-05:00

A one-time lump-sum business loan repaid on a fixed schedule over a short horizon (usually 3–24 months).

What are the best uses—and who is it for?2025-11-01T21:54:26-05:00

Short, high-ROI needs like inventory buys, bridging receivables/payables, seasonal stock, marketing pushes, or small equipment—when you want predictable payments.

How is it different from a line of credit or an MCA?2025-11-01T21:54:55-05:00

LOC = revolving (draw/repay repeatedly).
MCA = variable % of sales on purchased receivables.
Short-term loan = lump sum with fixed payments and set end date.

What terms and amounts are typical?2025-11-01T21:55:53-05:00

Terms commonly 6–18 months (range ~3–24). Amounts often tied to cash-flow—about 50–150% of average monthly deposits.

How is cost priced and what fees should I expect?2025-11-25T23:41:50-05:00

Lenders quote APR or a factor rate (e.g., 1.15). Compare total dollar payback, effective APR, and fees (origination, late/NSF, ACH).

What do I need to qualify?2025-11-01T21:56:42-05:00

Typical minimums: 6–12 months in business, $100k–$300k+ annual revenue, and ~550–650 FICO (varies by lender/industry).

Is collateral or a personal guaranty required?2025-11-01T21:57:12-05:00

Often a UCC-1 blanket lien on business assets and a personal guaranty for unsecured structures; specifics vary by offer.

What documents are required—and how fast is funding?2025-11-01T21:57:39-05:00

Usually application, IDs, 3–6 months of business bank statements, and a voided check. Approvals can be same-day; funding as fast as the next business day after signing.

How are payments structured?2025-11-01T21:58:44-05:00

Fixed daily or weekly ACH debits (sometimes bi-weekly or monthly). This aids planning but requires steady cash flow.

Can I repay early, and what are the risks?2025-11-01T21:59:10-05:00

Some lenders offer prepayment discounts; others don’t—get the payoff policy in writing. Key risks: over-borrowing, cash-flow strain from frequent debits, stacking multiple loans, and restrictive covenants.

Revenue-Based Financing FAQs

What is revenue-based financing (RBF)?2025-11-02T01:17:49-05:00

Growth capital you repay as a fixed percentage of future revenue until a pre-agreed cap (e.g., 1.3×–1.8× the amount funded) is reached.

How is RBF different from a loan or equity?2025-11-02T01:18:17-05:00

Loans have fixed payments and interest; RBF payments flex with revenue. Equity sells ownership; RBF doesn’t dilute (though some deals include small warrants).

Who is RBF best for, and typical use cases?2025-11-02T01:19:43-05:00

Businesses with predictable revenue and healthy margins (SaaS, subscription, e-commerce). Common uses: inventory, marketing/CAC, working capital for repeatable growth loops.

How much can I qualify for and what are typical terms?2025-11-02T01:19:22-05:00

Often a multiple of monthly revenue/GMV or MRR (for SaaS). Typical share rate: ~1%–10% of revenue; repayment cap: ~1.2×–2.0×; soft term: 12–48 months with a long-stop date.

How does pricing work—and how do I compare offers?2025-11-02T01:20:05-05:00

Cost is set by the cap multiple. Compare total dollar payback, expected payoff time, share rate, fees, and any long-stop/balloon rules; you can model an implied APR based on your revenue forecast.

What do providers look at to approve me?2025-11-02T01:20:29-05:00

Revenue scale and stability, margins, churn/retention (for SaaS), LTV/CAC, cohort performance, channel concentration, and connected data from bank/PSPs/accounting.

What documents/data are required?2025-11-02T01:20:52-05:00

IDs, bank statements, read-only connections to payment processors (Stripe/Shopify/Amazon/PayPal), accounting (QuickBooks/Xero), and basic financials. Personal guarantees/collateral are less common but possible.

How are payments calculated and collected?2025-11-02T01:21:15-05:00

You remit the agreed % of revenue (monthly is common; some weekly/daily) via automated ACH. Payments rise when sales rise and fall when sales dip—seasonality extends or shortens the payoff.

Can I repay early?2025-11-25T23:43:59-05:00

Many contracts require the remaining balance up to the cap regardless of timing (limited prepay discounts). If you haven’t hit the cap by the long-stop date, a residual/balloon may be due—confirm in writing.

What are the key risks and red flags?2025-11-02T01:21:56-05:00

Over-committing revenue share, stacking multiple RBFs, opaque “revenue” definitions, aggressive remedies, high caps, heavy fees, or strict long-stop clauses. Ensure terms align with margins, seasonality, and cash buffers.

Merchant Cash Advance FAQs

What is a Merchant Cash Advance (MCA)?2025-11-02T21:01:54-05:00

It’s an upfront lump sum in exchange for a fixed percentage (“holdback”) of your future sales until a set total payback (factor/multiple) is reached.

How is an MCA different from a loan?2025-11-02T21:02:21-05:00

An MCA isn’t a loan with interest and amortization; it’s a purchase of receivables with variable, revenue-linked remittances and a fixed total payback.

What do “factor rate” and “holdback” mean?2025-11-02T21:02:47-05:00

Factor rate (e.g., 1.35) sets the total you’ll repay (funded × factor). Holdback is the % of sales remitted (e.g., 8%–15%) until you hit that total.

How are payments collected?2025-11-02T21:03:15-05:00

Either via daily/weekly ACH debits (with periodic “true-ups”) or a processor split that diverts the holdback % from your card batches automatically.

How fast can I get funded and what’s required?2025-11-02T21:03:38-05:00

Approvals can be same day with basic docs: application, IDs, 3–6 months of bank/processor statements, and a voided check.

Who qualifies (and what helps approval)?2025-11-02T21:04:00-05:00

Typically 3–12+ months in business, consistent monthly revenue/deposits, limited NSFs, and stable average balances. Personal credit matters but revenue health matters more.

How do MCAs affect cash flow?2025-11-02T21:04:20-05:00

Remittances rise when sales rise and fall when sales dip. Ensure the holdback fits your margins and seasonality so you can cover COGS and operating expenses.

Can I repay early or get a discount?2025-11-02T21:04:44-05:00

Some funders offer early-pay discounts, but many require the remaining balance up to the factor—confirm the payoff policy in writing.

What are the main risks and red flags?2025-11-02T21:05:05-05:00

High total cost, stacking multiple positions, weak/absent reconciliation language, aggressive remedies (e.g., COJ clauses), and hidden fees. Read the contract carefully.

What are good alternatives to consider?2025-11-02T21:05:29-05:00

Short-term term loans (fixed payments), business lines of credit (revolving, often cheaper), revenue-based financing (broader revenue definition, capped payback), or invoice/equipment financing depending on your use case.

Equipment Funding FAQs

What is equipment funding?2025-11-04T00:38:04-05:00

Financing (loan or lease) used to acquire business equipment—secured by the equipment itself and repaid over time from your cash flow.

What kinds of equipment can be financed?2025-11-04T00:38:25-05:00

New/used machinery, vehicles, medical/dental devices, construction gear, restaurant/kitchen equipment, IT/servers, POS systems, and more (including many soft costs like installation and taxes).

Loan vs. lease—what’s the difference?2025-11-04T00:38:57-05:00
  • Loan: you own the asset; fixed payments; interest; lien on equipment.
    Lease: you pay to use the asset; options at end (FMV, 10% option, or $1 buyout); often lower payments during term.
What are typical terms and amounts?2025-11-04T00:39:20-05:00

Ticket sizes from ~$10k to multi-million; terms ~24–84 months (sometimes longer for heavy equipment), usually fixed payments.

How are rates/costs quoted?2025-11-04T00:39:44-05:00

Loans show APR; leases often show a payment “factor.” Always compare total dollar cost, implied APR, fees, and end-of-term (EOT) options.

What do I need to qualify?2025-11-04T00:40:08-05:00

Time in business (stronger ≥2 years), stable revenue/bank statements, reasonable credit (personal guaranty common), and a vendor quote/invoice with make/model/serials.

How fast can I get funded and what docs are required?2025-11-04T00:40:32-05:00

Simple deals can fund in 24–72 hours after approval & delivery/acceptance. Typical docs: application, IDs, bank statements/financials (depth by size), insurance binder, vendor invoice.

Can I finance soft costs or used equipment?2025-11-04T00:40:51-05:00

Often yes. Many programs include shipping, installation, and taxes; used gear is financeable with inspections and potentially shorter terms or higher down payments.

What happens at end of term?2025-11-04T00:41:22-05:00

Depends on structure:

  • $1 buyout: you own it.
  • Fixed-percent (e.g., 10%): purchase at set residual.
  • FMV: buy at fair market value, return, or renew. (Watch for evergreen auto-renewals—give notice on time.)
What are key risks and best practices?2025-11-04T00:41:54-05:00
  • Risks: evergreen clauses, unclear FMV, hidden fees, mismatched term vs asset life, under-insuring, and obsolescence.
  • Best practices: match term to useful life, verify fees/EOT in writing, maintain insurance, keep maintenance logs, and get UCC/title releases at payoff.

SBA 7(a) FAQs

What is an SBA 7(a) Working Capital loan?2025-11-04T21:14:36-05:00

A lender-originated business loan partially guaranteed by the SBA, used for day-to-day operating needs (inventory, payroll, marketing, etc.).

How is it different from a conventional bank loan?2025-11-04T21:14:56-05:00

Similar underwriting, but the SBA guaranty lets lenders approve more files, offer longer terms, and cap pricing within SBA limits.

What can (and can’t) I use the funds for?2025-11-04T21:15:24-05:00
  • Allowed: operating expenses, inventory, payroll, rent, marketing, and eligible refinancing.
  • Not allowed: personal use, speculative/passive investments, illegal purposes, certain tax issues without an approved plan.
What are typical loan amounts, rates, and terms?2025-11-04T21:15:42-05:00

Amounts range from small to multi-million (subject to program caps). Rates are benchmark (e.g., Prime/SOFR) + SBA-capped spread. Terms for working capital commonly up to 10 years.

Is it a term loan or a line of credit?2025-11-04T21:15:58-05:00

Either. You can do a term loan or a revolving/non-revolving working capital line under CAPLines (e.g., Working Capital CAPLine).

What collateral and guarantees are required?2025-11-04T21:16:15-05:00

Expect a blanket UCC-1 on business assets; lenders take available collateral when prudent. Personal guarantees are typical for owners ≥20%.

Who qualifies—and what do lenders look for?2025-11-04T21:16:35-05:00

For-profit U.S. small businesses meeting SBA size standards, with adequate cash flow, reasonable leverage, owner experience, and satisfactory credit. Lenders test DSCR (often ≥1.15x) and “credit elsewhere.”

What documentation do I need?2025-11-04T21:16:53-05:00

SBA forms, ownership/BOI info, 3 years business & personal tax returns (as applicable), YTD financials, projections (for startups/growth), bank statements, AR/AP agings, and a debt schedule.

How long does it take to get approved and funded?2025-11-04T21:17:14-05:00

PLP (Preferred Lender) files can move in weeks; complex files or non-PLP submissions can take longer due to SBA concurrence and third-party checks.

Can I refinance higher-cost debt?2025-11-26T00:01:29-05:00

Often yes—if it provides a documented “substantial benefit” (better rate/term/cash flow) and meets SBA refinancing rules; you’ll need payoff letters and compliance with SBA guidelines.

Business Line of Credit FAQs

What is a business line of credit?2025-10-25T18:37:32-05:00

A flexible funding account with a set limit you can draw from, repay, and draw again. You pay interest only on what you use.

How is it different from a term loan?2025-10-25T18:39:27-05:00

A term loan is a one-time lump sum with fixed payments; a line of credit is revolving—use it as needed for short-term cash needs.

Who qualifies for a line of credit?2025-10-25T18:39:53-05:00

Typically: 6–24+ months in business, consistent revenue/cash flow, and acceptable business/personal credit. Stronger profiles get better limits and rates.

Do I need a personal guarantee?2025-10-25T18:40:16-05:00

Often yes for small businesses. Some asset-based lines may reduce or waive it, but expect tighter terms.

Is it secured or unsecured?2025-10-25T18:40:40-05:00

Both exist. Many lines include a blanket lien (UCC-1) on business assets; unsecured options rely more on cash flow and credit strength.

How are rates set—and are they fixed or variable?2025-10-25T18:41:02-05:00

Rates depend on revenue, credit, industry risk, and collateral. Many lines are variable (e.g., Prime/SOFR + margin); some offer fixed pricing for a period.

What fees should I expect?2025-10-25T18:45:25-05:00

Possible fees: origination, draw/transaction, annual/maintenance, late/NSF, and wire/ACH. Many lines have no prepayment penalties—confirm your agreement.

How do draws and repayments work?2025-10-25T18:45:46-05:00

Request a draw via portal; funds arrive by ACH/wire. Payments are typically weekly or monthly; interest accrues on outstanding principal only.

How fast can I get approved and access funds?2025-10-25T18:46:11-05:00

Simple files can be same-day to a few business days. Once open, ACH draws often land in 1–2 business days; wires can be same day (fees may apply).

Will applying or using the line affect my credit?2025-10-25T18:46:30-05:00

Pre-qual may be a soft pull; final approval usually involves a hard pull. On-time usage can help build business credit when lenders report.

Short-Term Business Loan FAQs

What is a short-term business loan?2025-12-31T12:02:08-05:00

A one-time lump-sum business loan repaid on a fixed schedule over a short horizon (usually 3–24 months).

What are the best uses—and who is it for?2025-11-01T21:54:26-05:00

Short, high-ROI needs like inventory buys, bridging receivables/payables, seasonal stock, marketing pushes, or small equipment—when you want predictable payments.

How is it different from a line of credit or an MCA?2025-11-01T21:54:55-05:00

LOC = revolving (draw/repay repeatedly).
MCA = variable % of sales on purchased receivables.
Short-term loan = lump sum with fixed payments and set end date.

What terms and amounts are typical?2025-11-01T21:55:53-05:00

Terms commonly 6–18 months (range ~3–24). Amounts often tied to cash-flow—about 50–150% of average monthly deposits.

How is cost priced and what fees should I expect?2025-11-25T23:41:50-05:00

Lenders quote APR or a factor rate (e.g., 1.15). Compare total dollar payback, effective APR, and fees (origination, late/NSF, ACH).

What do I need to qualify?2025-11-01T21:56:42-05:00

Typical minimums: 6–12 months in business, $100k–$300k+ annual revenue, and ~550–650 FICO (varies by lender/industry).

Is collateral or a personal guaranty required?2025-11-01T21:57:12-05:00

Often a UCC-1 blanket lien on business assets and a personal guaranty for unsecured structures; specifics vary by offer.

What documents are required—and how fast is funding?2025-11-01T21:57:39-05:00

Usually application, IDs, 3–6 months of business bank statements, and a voided check. Approvals can be same-day; funding as fast as the next business day after signing.

How are payments structured?2025-11-01T21:58:44-05:00

Fixed daily or weekly ACH debits (sometimes bi-weekly or monthly). This aids planning but requires steady cash flow.

Can I repay early, and what are the risks?2025-11-01T21:59:10-05:00

Some lenders offer prepayment discounts; others don’t—get the payoff policy in writing. Key risks: over-borrowing, cash-flow strain from frequent debits, stacking multiple loans, and restrictive covenants.

Revenue-Based Financing FAQs

What is revenue-based financing (RBF)?2025-11-02T01:17:49-05:00

Growth capital you repay as a fixed percentage of future revenue until a pre-agreed cap (e.g., 1.3×–1.8× the amount funded) is reached.

How is RBF different from a loan or equity?2025-11-02T01:18:17-05:00

Loans have fixed payments and interest; RBF payments flex with revenue. Equity sells ownership; RBF doesn’t dilute (though some deals include small warrants).

Who is RBF best for, and typical use cases?2025-11-02T01:19:43-05:00

Businesses with predictable revenue and healthy margins (SaaS, subscription, e-commerce). Common uses: inventory, marketing/CAC, working capital for repeatable growth loops.

How much can I qualify for and what are typical terms?2025-11-02T01:19:22-05:00

Often a multiple of monthly revenue/GMV or MRR (for SaaS). Typical share rate: ~1%–10% of revenue; repayment cap: ~1.2×–2.0×; soft term: 12–48 months with a long-stop date.

How does pricing work—and how do I compare offers?2025-11-02T01:20:05-05:00

Cost is set by the cap multiple. Compare total dollar payback, expected payoff time, share rate, fees, and any long-stop/balloon rules; you can model an implied APR based on your revenue forecast.

What do providers look at to approve me?2025-11-02T01:20:29-05:00

Revenue scale and stability, margins, churn/retention (for SaaS), LTV/CAC, cohort performance, channel concentration, and connected data from bank/PSPs/accounting.

What documents/data are required?2025-11-02T01:20:52-05:00

IDs, bank statements, read-only connections to payment processors (Stripe/Shopify/Amazon/PayPal), accounting (QuickBooks/Xero), and basic financials. Personal guarantees/collateral are less common but possible.

How are payments calculated and collected?2025-11-02T01:21:15-05:00

You remit the agreed % of revenue (monthly is common; some weekly/daily) via automated ACH. Payments rise when sales rise and fall when sales dip—seasonality extends or shortens the payoff.

Can I repay early?2025-11-25T23:43:59-05:00

Many contracts require the remaining balance up to the cap regardless of timing (limited prepay discounts). If you haven’t hit the cap by the long-stop date, a residual/balloon may be due—confirm in writing.

What are the key risks and red flags?2025-11-02T01:21:56-05:00

Over-committing revenue share, stacking multiple RBFs, opaque “revenue” definitions, aggressive remedies, high caps, heavy fees, or strict long-stop clauses. Ensure terms align with margins, seasonality, and cash buffers.

Merchant Cash Advance FAQs

What is a Merchant Cash Advance (MCA)?2025-11-02T21:01:54-05:00

It’s an upfront lump sum in exchange for a fixed percentage (“holdback”) of your future sales until a set total payback (factor/multiple) is reached.

How is an MCA different from a loan?2025-11-02T21:02:21-05:00

An MCA isn’t a loan with interest and amortization; it’s a purchase of receivables with variable, revenue-linked remittances and a fixed total payback.

What do “factor rate” and “holdback” mean?2025-11-02T21:02:47-05:00

Factor rate (e.g., 1.35) sets the total you’ll repay (funded × factor). Holdback is the % of sales remitted (e.g., 8%–15%) until you hit that total.

How are payments collected?2025-11-02T21:03:15-05:00

Either via daily/weekly ACH debits (with periodic “true-ups”) or a processor split that diverts the holdback % from your card batches automatically.

How fast can I get funded and what’s required?2025-11-02T21:03:38-05:00

Approvals can be same day with basic docs: application, IDs, 3–6 months of bank/processor statements, and a voided check.

Who qualifies (and what helps approval)?2025-11-02T21:04:00-05:00

Typically 3–12+ months in business, consistent monthly revenue/deposits, limited NSFs, and stable average balances. Personal credit matters but revenue health matters more.

How do MCAs affect cash flow?2025-11-02T21:04:20-05:00

Remittances rise when sales rise and fall when sales dip. Ensure the holdback fits your margins and seasonality so you can cover COGS and operating expenses.

Can I repay early or get a discount?2025-11-02T21:04:44-05:00

Some funders offer early-pay discounts, but many require the remaining balance up to the factor—confirm the payoff policy in writing.

What are the main risks and red flags?2025-11-02T21:05:05-05:00

High total cost, stacking multiple positions, weak/absent reconciliation language, aggressive remedies (e.g., COJ clauses), and hidden fees. Read the contract carefully.

What are good alternatives to consider?2025-11-02T21:05:29-05:00

Short-term term loans (fixed payments), business lines of credit (revolving, often cheaper), revenue-based financing (broader revenue definition, capped payback), or invoice/equipment financing depending on your use case.

Equipment Funding FAQs

What is equipment funding?2025-11-04T00:38:04-05:00

Financing (loan or lease) used to acquire business equipment—secured by the equipment itself and repaid over time from your cash flow.

What kinds of equipment can be financed?2025-11-04T00:38:25-05:00

New/used machinery, vehicles, medical/dental devices, construction gear, restaurant/kitchen equipment, IT/servers, POS systems, and more (including many soft costs like installation and taxes).

Loan vs. lease—what’s the difference?2025-11-04T00:38:57-05:00
  • Loan: you own the asset; fixed payments; interest; lien on equipment.
    Lease: you pay to use the asset; options at end (FMV, 10% option, or $1 buyout); often lower payments during term.
What are typical terms and amounts?2025-11-04T00:39:20-05:00

Ticket sizes from ~$10k to multi-million; terms ~24–84 months (sometimes longer for heavy equipment), usually fixed payments.

How are rates/costs quoted?2025-11-04T00:39:44-05:00

Loans show APR; leases often show a payment “factor.” Always compare total dollar cost, implied APR, fees, and end-of-term (EOT) options.

What do I need to qualify?2025-11-04T00:40:08-05:00

Time in business (stronger ≥2 years), stable revenue/bank statements, reasonable credit (personal guaranty common), and a vendor quote/invoice with make/model/serials.

How fast can I get funded and what docs are required?2025-11-04T00:40:32-05:00

Simple deals can fund in 24–72 hours after approval & delivery/acceptance. Typical docs: application, IDs, bank statements/financials (depth by size), insurance binder, vendor invoice.

Can I finance soft costs or used equipment?2025-11-04T00:40:51-05:00

Often yes. Many programs include shipping, installation, and taxes; used gear is financeable with inspections and potentially shorter terms or higher down payments.

What happens at end of term?2025-11-04T00:41:22-05:00

Depends on structure:

  • $1 buyout: you own it.
  • Fixed-percent (e.g., 10%): purchase at set residual.
  • FMV: buy at fair market value, return, or renew. (Watch for evergreen auto-renewals—give notice on time.)
What are key risks and best practices?2025-11-04T00:41:54-05:00
  • Risks: evergreen clauses, unclear FMV, hidden fees, mismatched term vs asset life, under-insuring, and obsolescence.
  • Best practices: match term to useful life, verify fees/EOT in writing, maintain insurance, keep maintenance logs, and get UCC/title releases at payoff.

SBA 7(a) FAQs

What is an SBA 7(a) Working Capital loan?2025-11-04T21:14:36-05:00

A lender-originated business loan partially guaranteed by the SBA, used for day-to-day operating needs (inventory, payroll, marketing, etc.).

How is it different from a conventional bank loan?2025-11-04T21:14:56-05:00

Similar underwriting, but the SBA guaranty lets lenders approve more files, offer longer terms, and cap pricing within SBA limits.

What can (and can’t) I use the funds for?2025-11-04T21:15:24-05:00
  • Allowed: operating expenses, inventory, payroll, rent, marketing, and eligible refinancing.
  • Not allowed: personal use, speculative/passive investments, illegal purposes, certain tax issues without an approved plan.
What are typical loan amounts, rates, and terms?2025-11-04T21:15:42-05:00

Amounts range from small to multi-million (subject to program caps). Rates are benchmark (e.g., Prime/SOFR) + SBA-capped spread. Terms for working capital commonly up to 10 years.

Is it a term loan or a line of credit?2025-11-04T21:15:58-05:00

Either. You can do a term loan or a revolving/non-revolving working capital line under CAPLines (e.g., Working Capital CAPLine).

What collateral and guarantees are required?2025-11-04T21:16:15-05:00

Expect a blanket UCC-1 on business assets; lenders take available collateral when prudent. Personal guarantees are typical for owners ≥20%.

Who qualifies—and what do lenders look for?2025-11-04T21:16:35-05:00

For-profit U.S. small businesses meeting SBA size standards, with adequate cash flow, reasonable leverage, owner experience, and satisfactory credit. Lenders test DSCR (often ≥1.15x) and “credit elsewhere.”

What documentation do I need?2025-11-04T21:16:53-05:00

SBA forms, ownership/BOI info, 3 years business & personal tax returns (as applicable), YTD financials, projections (for startups/growth), bank statements, AR/AP agings, and a debt schedule.

How long does it take to get approved and funded?2025-11-04T21:17:14-05:00

PLP (Preferred Lender) files can move in weeks; complex files or non-PLP submissions can take longer due to SBA concurrence and third-party checks.

Can I refinance higher-cost debt?2025-11-26T00:01:29-05:00

Often yes—if it provides a documented “substantial benefit” (better rate/term/cash flow) and meets SBA refinancing rules; you’ll need payoff letters and compliance with SBA guidelines.

Business Line of Credit FAQs
What is a business line of credit?2025-10-25T18:37:32-05:00

A flexible funding account with a set limit you can draw from, repay, and draw again. You pay interest only on what you use.

How is it different from a term loan?2025-10-25T18:39:27-05:00

A term loan is a one-time lump sum with fixed payments; a line of credit is revolving—use it as needed for short-term cash needs.

Who qualifies for a line of credit?2025-10-25T18:39:53-05:00

Typically: 6–24+ months in business, consistent revenue/cash flow, and acceptable business/personal credit. Stronger profiles get better limits and rates.

Do I need a personal guarantee?2025-10-25T18:40:16-05:00

Often yes for small businesses. Some asset-based lines may reduce or waive it, but expect tighter terms.

Is it secured or unsecured?2025-10-25T18:40:40-05:00

Both exist. Many lines include a blanket lien (UCC-1) on business assets; unsecured options rely more on cash flow and credit strength.

How are rates set—and are they fixed or variable?2025-10-25T18:41:02-05:00

Rates depend on revenue, credit, industry risk, and collateral. Many lines are variable (e.g., Prime/SOFR + margin); some offer fixed pricing for a period.

What fees should I expect?2025-10-25T18:45:25-05:00

Possible fees: origination, draw/transaction, annual/maintenance, late/NSF, and wire/ACH. Many lines have no prepayment penalties—confirm your agreement.

How do draws and repayments work?2025-10-25T18:45:46-05:00

Request a draw via portal; funds arrive by ACH/wire. Payments are typically weekly or monthly; interest accrues on outstanding principal only.

How fast can I get approved and access funds?2025-10-25T18:46:11-05:00

Simple files can be same-day to a few business days. Once open, ACH draws often land in 1–2 business days; wires can be same day (fees may apply).

Will applying or using the line affect my credit?2025-10-25T18:46:30-05:00

Pre-qual may be a soft pull; final approval usually involves a hard pull. On-time usage can help build business credit when lenders report.

Short-Term Business Loan FAQs
What is a short-term business loan?2025-12-31T12:02:08-05:00

A one-time lump-sum business loan repaid on a fixed schedule over a short horizon (usually 3–24 months).

What are the best uses—and who is it for?2025-11-01T21:54:26-05:00

Short, high-ROI needs like inventory buys, bridging receivables/payables, seasonal stock, marketing pushes, or small equipment—when you want predictable payments.

How is it different from a line of credit or an MCA?2025-11-01T21:54:55-05:00

LOC = revolving (draw/repay repeatedly).
MCA = variable % of sales on purchased receivables.
Short-term loan = lump sum with fixed payments and set end date.

What terms and amounts are typical?2025-11-01T21:55:53-05:00

Terms commonly 6–18 months (range ~3–24). Amounts often tied to cash-flow—about 50–150% of average monthly deposits.

How is cost priced and what fees should I expect?2025-11-25T23:41:50-05:00

Lenders quote APR or a factor rate (e.g., 1.15). Compare total dollar payback, effective APR, and fees (origination, late/NSF, ACH).

What do I need to qualify?2025-11-01T21:56:42-05:00

Typical minimums: 6–12 months in business, $100k–$300k+ annual revenue, and ~550–650 FICO (varies by lender/industry).

Is collateral or a personal guaranty required?2025-11-01T21:57:12-05:00

Often a UCC-1 blanket lien on business assets and a personal guaranty for unsecured structures; specifics vary by offer.

What documents are required—and how fast is funding?2025-11-01T21:57:39-05:00

Usually application, IDs, 3–6 months of business bank statements, and a voided check. Approvals can be same-day; funding as fast as the next business day after signing.

How are payments structured?2025-11-01T21:58:44-05:00

Fixed daily or weekly ACH debits (sometimes bi-weekly or monthly). This aids planning but requires steady cash flow.

Can I repay early, and what are the risks?2025-11-01T21:59:10-05:00

Some lenders offer prepayment discounts; others don’t—get the payoff policy in writing. Key risks: over-borrowing, cash-flow strain from frequent debits, stacking multiple loans, and restrictive covenants.

Revenue-Based Financing FAQs
What is revenue-based financing (RBF)?2025-11-02T01:17:49-05:00

Growth capital you repay as a fixed percentage of future revenue until a pre-agreed cap (e.g., 1.3×–1.8× the amount funded) is reached.

How is RBF different from a loan or equity?2025-11-02T01:18:17-05:00

Loans have fixed payments and interest; RBF payments flex with revenue. Equity sells ownership; RBF doesn’t dilute (though some deals include small warrants).

Who is RBF best for, and typical use cases?2025-11-02T01:19:43-05:00

Businesses with predictable revenue and healthy margins (SaaS, subscription, e-commerce). Common uses: inventory, marketing/CAC, working capital for repeatable growth loops.

How much can I qualify for and what are typical terms?2025-11-02T01:19:22-05:00

Often a multiple of monthly revenue/GMV or MRR (for SaaS). Typical share rate: ~1%–10% of revenue; repayment cap: ~1.2×–2.0×; soft term: 12–48 months with a long-stop date.

How does pricing work—and how do I compare offers?2025-11-02T01:20:05-05:00

Cost is set by the cap multiple. Compare total dollar payback, expected payoff time, share rate, fees, and any long-stop/balloon rules; you can model an implied APR based on your revenue forecast.

What do providers look at to approve me?2025-11-02T01:20:29-05:00

Revenue scale and stability, margins, churn/retention (for SaaS), LTV/CAC, cohort performance, channel concentration, and connected data from bank/PSPs/accounting.

What documents/data are required?2025-11-02T01:20:52-05:00

IDs, bank statements, read-only connections to payment processors (Stripe/Shopify/Amazon/PayPal), accounting (QuickBooks/Xero), and basic financials. Personal guarantees/collateral are less common but possible.

How are payments calculated and collected?2025-11-02T01:21:15-05:00

You remit the agreed % of revenue (monthly is common; some weekly/daily) via automated ACH. Payments rise when sales rise and fall when sales dip—seasonality extends or shortens the payoff.

Can I repay early?2025-11-25T23:43:59-05:00

Many contracts require the remaining balance up to the cap regardless of timing (limited prepay discounts). If you haven’t hit the cap by the long-stop date, a residual/balloon may be due—confirm in writing.

What are the key risks and red flags?2025-11-02T01:21:56-05:00

Over-committing revenue share, stacking multiple RBFs, opaque “revenue” definitions, aggressive remedies, high caps, heavy fees, or strict long-stop clauses. Ensure terms align with margins, seasonality, and cash buffers.

Merchant Cash Advance FAQs
What is a Merchant Cash Advance (MCA)?2025-11-02T21:01:54-05:00

It’s an upfront lump sum in exchange for a fixed percentage (“holdback”) of your future sales until a set total payback (factor/multiple) is reached.

How is an MCA different from a loan?2025-11-02T21:02:21-05:00

An MCA isn’t a loan with interest and amortization; it’s a purchase of receivables with variable, revenue-linked remittances and a fixed total payback.

What do “factor rate” and “holdback” mean?2025-11-02T21:02:47-05:00

Factor rate (e.g., 1.35) sets the total you’ll repay (funded × factor). Holdback is the % of sales remitted (e.g., 8%–15%) until you hit that total.

How are payments collected?2025-11-02T21:03:15-05:00

Either via daily/weekly ACH debits (with periodic “true-ups”) or a processor split that diverts the holdback % from your card batches automatically.

How fast can I get funded and what’s required?2025-11-02T21:03:38-05:00

Approvals can be same day with basic docs: application, IDs, 3–6 months of bank/processor statements, and a voided check.

Who qualifies (and what helps approval)?2025-11-02T21:04:00-05:00

Typically 3–12+ months in business, consistent monthly revenue/deposits, limited NSFs, and stable average balances. Personal credit matters but revenue health matters more.

How do MCAs affect cash flow?2025-11-02T21:04:20-05:00

Remittances rise when sales rise and fall when sales dip. Ensure the holdback fits your margins and seasonality so you can cover COGS and operating expenses.

Can I repay early or get a discount?2025-11-02T21:04:44-05:00

Some funders offer early-pay discounts, but many require the remaining balance up to the factor—confirm the payoff policy in writing.

What are the main risks and red flags?2025-11-02T21:05:05-05:00

High total cost, stacking multiple positions, weak/absent reconciliation language, aggressive remedies (e.g., COJ clauses), and hidden fees. Read the contract carefully.

What are good alternatives to consider?2025-11-02T21:05:29-05:00

Short-term term loans (fixed payments), business lines of credit (revolving, often cheaper), revenue-based financing (broader revenue definition, capped payback), or invoice/equipment financing depending on your use case.

Equipment Funding FAQs
What is equipment funding?2025-11-04T00:38:04-05:00

Financing (loan or lease) used to acquire business equipment—secured by the equipment itself and repaid over time from your cash flow.

What kinds of equipment can be financed?2025-11-04T00:38:25-05:00

New/used machinery, vehicles, medical/dental devices, construction gear, restaurant/kitchen equipment, IT/servers, POS systems, and more (including many soft costs like installation and taxes).

Loan vs. lease—what’s the difference?2025-11-04T00:38:57-05:00
  • Loan: you own the asset; fixed payments; interest; lien on equipment.
    Lease: you pay to use the asset; options at end (FMV, 10% option, or $1 buyout); often lower payments during term.
What are typical terms and amounts?2025-11-04T00:39:20-05:00

Ticket sizes from ~$10k to multi-million; terms ~24–84 months (sometimes longer for heavy equipment), usually fixed payments.

How are rates/costs quoted?2025-11-04T00:39:44-05:00

Loans show APR; leases often show a payment “factor.” Always compare total dollar cost, implied APR, fees, and end-of-term (EOT) options.

What do I need to qualify?2025-11-04T00:40:08-05:00

Time in business (stronger ≥2 years), stable revenue/bank statements, reasonable credit (personal guaranty common), and a vendor quote/invoice with make/model/serials.

How fast can I get funded and what docs are required?2025-11-04T00:40:32-05:00

Simple deals can fund in 24–72 hours after approval & delivery/acceptance. Typical docs: application, IDs, bank statements/financials (depth by size), insurance binder, vendor invoice.

Can I finance soft costs or used equipment?2025-11-04T00:40:51-05:00

Often yes. Many programs include shipping, installation, and taxes; used gear is financeable with inspections and potentially shorter terms or higher down payments.

What happens at end of term?2025-11-04T00:41:22-05:00

Depends on structure:

  • $1 buyout: you own it.
  • Fixed-percent (e.g., 10%): purchase at set residual.
  • FMV: buy at fair market value, return, or renew. (Watch for evergreen auto-renewals—give notice on time.)
What are key risks and best practices?2025-11-04T00:41:54-05:00
  • Risks: evergreen clauses, unclear FMV, hidden fees, mismatched term vs asset life, under-insuring, and obsolescence.
  • Best practices: match term to useful life, verify fees/EOT in writing, maintain insurance, keep maintenance logs, and get UCC/title releases at payoff.
SBA 7(a) FAQs
What is an SBA 7(a) Working Capital loan?2025-11-04T21:14:36-05:00

A lender-originated business loan partially guaranteed by the SBA, used for day-to-day operating needs (inventory, payroll, marketing, etc.).

How is it different from a conventional bank loan?2025-11-04T21:14:56-05:00

Similar underwriting, but the SBA guaranty lets lenders approve more files, offer longer terms, and cap pricing within SBA limits.

What can (and can’t) I use the funds for?2025-11-04T21:15:24-05:00
  • Allowed: operating expenses, inventory, payroll, rent, marketing, and eligible refinancing.
  • Not allowed: personal use, speculative/passive investments, illegal purposes, certain tax issues without an approved plan.
What are typical loan amounts, rates, and terms?2025-11-04T21:15:42-05:00

Amounts range from small to multi-million (subject to program caps). Rates are benchmark (e.g., Prime/SOFR) + SBA-capped spread. Terms for working capital commonly up to 10 years.

Is it a term loan or a line of credit?2025-11-04T21:15:58-05:00

Either. You can do a term loan or a revolving/non-revolving working capital line under CAPLines (e.g., Working Capital CAPLine).

What collateral and guarantees are required?2025-11-04T21:16:15-05:00

Expect a blanket UCC-1 on business assets; lenders take available collateral when prudent. Personal guarantees are typical for owners ≥20%.

Who qualifies—and what do lenders look for?2025-11-04T21:16:35-05:00

For-profit U.S. small businesses meeting SBA size standards, with adequate cash flow, reasonable leverage, owner experience, and satisfactory credit. Lenders test DSCR (often ≥1.15x) and “credit elsewhere.”

What documentation do I need?2025-11-04T21:16:53-05:00

SBA forms, ownership/BOI info, 3 years business & personal tax returns (as applicable), YTD financials, projections (for startups/growth), bank statements, AR/AP agings, and a debt schedule.

How long does it take to get approved and funded?2025-11-04T21:17:14-05:00

PLP (Preferred Lender) files can move in weeks; complex files or non-PLP submissions can take longer due to SBA concurrence and third-party checks.

Can I refinance higher-cost debt?2025-11-26T00:01:29-05:00

Often yes—if it provides a documented “substantial benefit” (better rate/term/cash flow) and meets SBA refinancing rules; you’ll need payoff letters and compliance with SBA guidelines.

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