Commercial financing is not a single product. It is a portfolio of tools, each designed for a different problem. The borrower who matches the right tool to the right use case pays less, closes faster, and builds a stronger balance sheet. This guide maps ten financing products to four core business needs and provides decision rules for choosing between them.
Start Here: Three Questions
- What is the capital for?
Growth or expansion | Operations or cash flow | Equipment or property | Emergency or time-sensitive - How fast do you need it?
Under 7 days? Only speed products qualify. 2-4 weeks? Most conventional options work. 30+ days? SBA programs unlock the lowest rates. - Is it recurring or one-time?
Recurring needs point to a line of credit. One-time needs point to term loans or asset-specific financing.
Key Takeaways
- Every financing decision starts with the use case, not the product. Growth, working capital, asset acquisition, and speed each point to different product families.
- Cost and timeline are inversely correlated across nearly every product category. This is the single most important tradeoff in commercial lending.
- SBA programs offer the lowest rates for borrowers who can absorb the longer approval timelines. Conventional and online products trade cost for speed.
- Most businesses need multiple products simultaneously. A capital stack that combines two or three instruments often outperforms any single product.
- High-cost speed products (MCA, bridge loans) are legitimate tools when used as bridges to permanent financing, but become traps when used as ongoing capital sources.
Financing Decision Framework
The flowchart below maps the decision from use case to product. Start at the top with what you need capital for, then follow the branches based on timing and cost tolerance.
Decision Thresholds
Before diving into individual product categories, apply these screening rules to narrow the field. Each threshold eliminates products that cannot meet a core constraint, saving time on applications that will not close.
If/Then Decision Rules
- If timeline is under 7 days: Eliminate SBA 7(a) and SBA 504. Only factoring (1-7 days), MCA (1-5 days), and RBF (3-10 days) can reliably close.
- If the asset is real estate or heavy equipment: Prioritize SBA 504 for the lowest blended rate (~6.5-7.5% ) or equipment financing (6-12% ) for faster close.
- If the need is recurring: A line of credit outperforms a term loan. Revolving access avoids repeated application cycles and lets you draw only what you need.
- If deal value exceeds $350,000: The SBA 7(a) rate cap advantage is strongest here. Maximum spread is Prime + 3.0% = 9.75%, compared to conventional rates that can run 10-12%+ at the same loan size.
- If the need is temporary (under 12 months): Structure it as a bridge to permanent financing. A bridge loan at 8-15% for three months costs far less in total interest than locking into a five-year term at 11%.
- If credit is weak (below 650): Asset-backed options (equipment financing, factoring) and revenue-based products (RBF, MCA) do not rely primarily on credit score. Expect higher costs, but access is broader.
Dashboard: Financing Products by Cost and Speed
At a Glance
- Lowest cost: SBA 504 (~6.5-7.5% blended ), SBA 7(a) (up to 9.75% on loans above $350K)
- Fastest close: Factoring (1-7 days), MCA (1-5 days), RBF (3-10 days)
- Best for recurring needs: Business line of credit (7.75-14.75%, draw as needed)
- Best for asset purchases: Equipment financing (6-12%, asset is collateral)
- Highest all-in cost: MCA (factor rate 1.10-1.50, effective APR 40-350%+ )
Growth Capital: Expansion, Acquisition, and Market Entry
Growth Capital: Fast Path
- Best product: SBA 7(a) (up to 9.75% on loans above $350K)
- If urgent: Conventional term loan (2-6 weeks)
- If real estate involved: SBA 504 (~6.5-7.5% blended )
- If weak credit: Revenue-based financing (payback 1.1-1.5x, 3-10 days)
- Cost range: 6.5-12.75%
- Timeline: 2-16 weeks
Growth capital funds the initiatives that change a company's trajectory: opening a second location, acquiring a competitor, entering a new market, or hiring ahead of demand. These are planned expenditures with long payback periods, which means the financing cost compounds over years. The difference between a 9.75% SBA 7(a) loan and a 12.75% conventional term loan on a $500,000 expansion is roughly $15,000 per year in additional interest (calculate your SBA payment), and that gap persists for the full loan term.
Borrowers pursuing business acquisition financing face a particular timing challenge. Acquisition targets have competing offers, and sellers favor certainty of close. SBA 7(a) delivers the best rate, but its 30-90 day timeline can lose deals. The practical solution is often a conventional term loan to close quickly, with a plan to refinance into SBA terms once the acquisition stabilizes. For growth involving commercial real estate, SBA 504 provides the lowest blended rate but requires the longest timeline at 60-120 days.
| Product | Typical Rate | Timeline | Best For | Key Constraint |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SBA 7(a) | Up to 9.75% (>$350K) | 30-90 days | Large expansions, acquisitions | Lengthy approval, documentation |
| Conventional term loan | 7.75-12.75% | 2-6 weeks | Mid-size growth, faster close | Credit and revenue requirements |
| SBA 504 | ~6.5-7.5% blended | 60-120 days | Real estate, major equipment | Must be owner-occupied, long process |
| Revenue-based financing | Payback 1.1-1.5x | 3-10 days | Quick growth capital, weak credit | High total cost, daily/weekly repayment |
Working Capital: Cash Flow, Payroll, and Operational Gaps
Working Capital: Fast Path
- Best product: Business line of credit (7.75-14.75%, revolving)
- If urgent: Invoice factoring (1-7 days, no debt on balance sheet)
- If weak credit: Invoice factoring (underwriting based on customer credit, not yours)
- Cost range: 7.75-14.75% (LOC) or 1-5% per month (factoring )
- Timeline: 1 day to 4 weeks
Working capital financing solves a different problem than growth capital. The need is operational: covering payroll during a slow month, funding inventory ahead of a seasonal peak, or bridging the gap between delivering services and collecting payment. The defining characteristic is that these needs are recurring and often predictable. A business line of credit is the structural solution because it provides revolving access without requiring a new application each cycle. Draw what you need, repay it, draw again.
Invoice factoring fills a different niche: it converts outstanding receivables into immediate cash at an advance rate of 80-90%. The factoring company collects directly from your customers, which means underwriting is based on your customers' creditworthiness, not yours. This makes factoring particularly accessible for businesses with strong client rosters but weak personal or business credit. The monthly cost of 1-5% is higher than a line of credit on an annualized basis, but factoring creates no debt and closes in days rather than weeks.
| Product | Typical Rate / Cost | Timeline | Best For | Key Constraint |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Business line of credit | 7.75-14.75% | 1-4 weeks | Recurring cash flow needs | Credit requirements, annual renewal |
| Working capital loan | 8-15% | 1-3 weeks | One-time operational shortfall | Fixed repayment, less flexibility |
| Invoice factoring | 1-5% per month | 1-7 days | Receivable-heavy businesses | Customer credit matters, notification |
Asset Acquisition: Equipment, Vehicles, and Real Estate
Asset Acquisition: Fast Path
- Best product (equipment): Equipment financing (6-12%, asset is collateral)
- Best product (real estate): SBA 504 (~6.5-7.5% blended )
- If urgent: Equipment financing (1-3 weeks) or bridge loan (1-3 weeks)
- If weak credit: Equipment financing (asset secures the loan)
- Cost range: 6-12% (equipment) to ~6.5-7.5% (SBA 504)
- Timeline: 1-16 weeks depending on product
Asset-backed financing benefits from a structural advantage: the asset itself serves as collateral, which reduces lender risk and produces lower rates. Equipment financing at 6-12% is often the cheapest option outside of SBA programs because the lender can repossess and resell the equipment if the borrower defaults. This self-collateralizing structure also means equipment loans are available to borrowers who might not qualify for unsecured credit. The equipment's value does the heavy lifting in underwriting.
For commercial real estate, SBA 504 stands alone on cost. The program blends a conventional first mortgage (roughly 50% of the project) with a CDC-funded second mortgage (up to 40%) at below-market fixed rates, producing a blended rate around 6.5-7.5%. The tradeoff is time and complexity: SBA 504 requires 60-120 days, owner occupancy, and substantial documentation. When the deal timeline is tight, a bridge loan can close the acquisition while the SBA 504 application processes in parallel.
| Product | Typical Rate | Timeline | Best For | Key Constraint |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Equipment financing | 6-12% | 1-3 weeks | Machinery, vehicles, technology | Asset must hold resale value |
| SBA 504 | ~6.5-7.5% blended | 60-120 days | Owner-occupied commercial real estate | Owner occupancy, long timeline |
| CRE loan (conventional) | 7.5-11% | 3-8 weeks | Investment property, faster close | Higher down payment, no SBA rate cap |
| Bridge loan | 8-15% | 1-3 weeks | Time-sensitive acquisitions | Short term only, exit plan required |
Speed Capital: Emergency and Opportunity Funding
Speed Capital: Fast Path
- Best product (if receivables exist): Invoice factoring (1-7 days, 1-5% per month)
- Best product (if revenue-based): RBF (3-10 days, payback 1.1-1.5x)
- If time-sensitive deal: Bridge loan (1-3 weeks, 8-15%)
- Last resort only: MCA (1-5 days, effective APR 40-350%+ )
- Cost range: 1-5% monthly (factoring) to 40-350%+ APR (MCA)
- Timeline: 1-21 days
Speed capital is a constraint, not a product category. When timeline eliminates conventional and SBA options, the discipline is choosing the least expensive product that meets the deadline. Invoice factoring closes in 1-7 days at a fraction of MCA cost. Revenue-based financing closes in 3-10 days with more predictable structure (payback 1.1-1.5x ) than a merchant cash advance.
MCA occupies the last-resort position for a reason. With effective APR ranging from 40% to over 350% and daily repayment drawn from card sales, MCA can create a debt cycle where the repayment itself starves the business of working capital. Bridge loans at 8-15% provide a better speed option for deal-driven urgency, particularly when the borrower has a clear exit strategy (refinance into permanent financing, close a receivable, or complete a sale).
| Product | Typical Cost | Timeline | Best For | Key Constraint |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Invoice factoring | 1-5% per month | 1-7 days | Receivable-backed emergency cash | Must have outstanding invoices |
| Revenue-based financing | Payback 1.1-1.5x | 3-10 days | Revenue-generating businesses | Revenue-share repayment |
| Bridge loan | 8-15% | 1-3 weeks | Time-sensitive deals, gap funding | Exit plan mandatory |
| Merchant cash advance | Factor 1.10-1.50 (APR 40-350%+ ) | 1-5 days | Last resort when all others fail | Extremely high total cost |
How It Works in Practice
Financing decisions rarely involve a single product. Most growing businesses need a capital stack that combines instruments across use cases. These three scenarios illustrate how the framework applies to real situations.
Scenario 1: General Contractor Expanding Into a New Market
A commercial general contractor with $4M in annual revenue wins a large public works contract that requires a new fabrication facility and additional equipment. The owner needs three things simultaneously: a building, machinery, and working capital to fund the ramp-up period before project payments start flowing.
The capital stack: SBA 504 for the facility (~6.5-7.5% blended, 60-120 days), equipment financing for the machinery (6-12%, 1-3 weeks), and a business line of credit for the working capital ramp-up (7.75-14.75% ). The equipment financing closes first and lets the crew begin mobilization while the SBA 504 processes. The line of credit covers payroll and materials before the first progress payment arrives. Three products, three different timelines, one integrated plan. Total blended cost across the stack is significantly lower than funding everything through a single conventional term loan.
Scenario 2: Retail Business With Seasonal Inventory Cycles
A specialty retailer does 55% of annual revenue between October and December. By August, the owner needs to place large inventory orders with suppliers. By January, outstanding receivables from corporate gift orders create a separate cash flow gap.
The capital stack: A business line of credit serves the planned seasonal draw, letting the owner fund inventory purchases in August and repay from holiday revenue in January. For the January receivable gap, invoice factoring converts the corporate invoices to cash in 1-7 days at 1-5% per month. MCA is not part of this plan. The entire cycle is predictable, and both the LOC and factoring facility can be arranged well in advance. An MCA would only enter the picture if the owner waited until the cash crunch was already underway and had no existing credit facility, which is exactly the scenario this stack prevents.
Scenario 3: Property Acquisition With a Tight Deadline
A medical practice has the opportunity to purchase the building it currently leases. The landlord has another buyer and gives 30 days to close. SBA 504 would save thousands per year in interest, but its 60-120 day timeline cannot meet the deadline.
The capital stack: A bridge loan closes the acquisition within 1-3 weeks at 8-15%. Simultaneously, the practice begins the SBA 504 application. Once approved (typically within 90-120 days of the initial closing), the practice refinances out of the bridge and into the permanent SBA structure at ~6.5-7.5%. The bridge cost for three to four months is a fraction of what it would cost to lose the property or pay a conventional CRE rate for the full loan term. This bridge-to-permanent pattern is one of the most common multi-product strategies in commercial real estate.
Cross-Theme Analysis
Three patterns emerge across all four use-case categories that shape how borrowers should evaluate their options.
The SBA Rate Cap Advantage Scales With Loan Size
SBA 7(a) maximum spreads are tiered by loan size: Prime + 3.0% on loans above $350K, Prime + 4.5% from $250K to $350K, Prime + 6.0% from $50K to $250K, and Prime + 6.5% below $50K. At the current Prime Rate of 6.75%, that translates to a maximum of 9.75% on large loans. Conventional term loans at the same size routinely price at 10-12%. The rate cap advantage is most meaningful on larger, longer-term deals where the annual savings compound. On a $100K short-term loan, the savings may not justify the SBA timeline.
Multi-Product Stacks Outperform Single-Product Solutions
The scenarios above prove the principle: pair a low-cost, long-term product (SBA or equipment financing) with a flexible short-term instrument (LOC or factoring) in a capital stack. Match each layer to its use case rather than forcing everything through one product.
Factor-Based Products Require Exit Planning
MCA, RBF, and bridge loans are structurally different from rate-based products. They are not priced with an annual interest rate that compounds predictably; they use factor rates or fixed payback multiples that front-load cost. This means they become disproportionately expensive when extended or renewed. A bridge loan at 12% for three months is a useful tool. That same bridge loan renewed three times becomes a 48% annual cost. Every factor-based product in the stack should have a documented exit: what permanent product will replace it, and on what timeline.
Borrower Implications
Start with the use case, not the product. "I need to fund a second location" opens the full decision tree. "I need an SBA loan" closes it. The use-case approach surfaces multi-product stacks that a product-first search misses.
Build credit facilities before you need them. A line of credit established six months before a seasonal crunch closes at better terms than one requested during the crunch. Factoring facilities can be set up with a provider and left dormant until needed. The borrowers who pay the most for capital are the ones who wait until urgency forces them into the speed category.
Quantify total cost on a common basis. A 10% term loan and a 1.3x factor rate are not comparable on their headlines. Annualize every product, include origination fees, closing costs, and prepayment penalties. For factor-based products, the effective APR over the actual repayment period is the only meaningful number.
Most Common Financing Mistakes
- Using MCA for non-urgent needs. If you have more than 7 days, cheaper options exist. MCA should only enter the conversation when every other timeline has failed.
- Choosing a term loan for recurring needs. A term loan funds a single event. If you draw, repay, and draw again, you need a line of credit, not a new application every cycle.
- Waiting until urgency to arrange credit. A line of credit or factoring facility set up in advance closes at better terms and on your timeline. Waiting until the cash crunch hits moves you from the lowest-cost column to the highest.
What to Watch
The financing landscape is not static. Several developments could shift the decision framework in the coming months.
- Prime Rate trajectory. The current Prime Rate of 6.75% (based on a Fed Funds target of 3.50-3.75% ) directly affects SBA 7(a) variable rates, conventional term loans, and lines of credit. If the FOMC holds rates steady through mid-2026, borrowers considering variable-rate products may want to lock in fixed alternatives where available.
- SBA program rule changes. SBA periodically adjusts loan size caps, fee structures, and eligibility requirements. The 7(a) program has seen multiple fee adjustments in recent years. Any increase in the maximum loan amount or reduction in guarantee fees would tilt the decision framework further toward SBA products for larger deals.
- Online lender competition. Increased competition among online lenders is compressing rates on conventional term loans, lines of credit, and equipment financing. This narrows the rate gap between SBA and conventional products, potentially making the faster conventional timeline more attractive for borrowers on the margin.
- Factor-rate disclosure rules. Several states have enacted or are considering commercial financing disclosure requirements that would force MCA and RBF providers to disclose APR equivalents. Greater transparency could accelerate the shift away from high-cost products by making the true cost comparison easier for borrowers.