Business Lending

Revenue-Based Financing: The Complete Guide (2026)

PP
, Founder — Stacking Capital
| | | 40 min read

TL;DR — Key Takeaways

  • Revenue-based financing (RBF) lets you access $10K–$20M+ in growth capital without giving up equity or making fixed monthly payments. Repayment scales with your revenue at 2%–20% of monthly income.
  • This guide covers 15 lenders across 3 tiers — from established fintech LOC providers (Bluevine, Fundbox, OnDeck) to pure RBF platforms (Clearco, Wayflyer, Pipe) to MCA providers you should avoid.
  • RBF and MCA are not the same thing. RBF typically costs 15–40% effective APR with monthly payments. MCAs cost 70–150%+ effective APR with daily debits, confessions of judgment, and aggressive collections.
  • UCC liens are the hidden trap. Most RBF and MCA providers file blanket UCC liens on all business assets. This can block future financing, damage your credit relationships, and take 30+ days to remove after payoff.
  • For e-commerce businesses, Clearco (6–12.5% flat fee, up to $20M) and Wayflyer (5–10% flat fee, 24-hour funding) are purpose-built. For SaaS, Lighter Capital offers up to $4M per round with no personal guarantee.
  • If you can qualify for an SBA loan (9.75–14.75% APR), it will always be cheaper. Use RBF as bridge capital or for speed, then refinance into traditional products as your business matures.
  • New state disclosure laws in California, New York, Connecticut, and Louisiana now require RBF/MCA lenders to provide APR-equivalent disclosures — use them to compare true costs before signing.

What Is Revenue-Based Financing?

Revenue-based financing (RBF) is a form of non-dilutive growth funding in which a business receives an upfront lump sum and repays it as a fixed percentage of ongoing revenue until a predetermined repayment cap is reached. Unlike traditional loans with fixed amortization schedules, RBF payments automatically scale up during high-revenue periods and scale down during slow months — no fixed monthly minimums, no equity surrendered, no board seats given up (Re:cap).

The Three Core Building Blocks

ComponentDescriptionTypical Range
Funding AmountCapital received upfront$10,000 – $20M+
Revenue Share Rate% of monthly revenue remitted as repayment2% – 20%
Repayment CapTotal repayment = funding × cap multiple1.1x – 3.0x

Example: A business takes $500K in RBF at a 1.35x repayment cap with a 6% monthly revenue share. Total repayment = $675,000. If monthly revenue is $200,000, the monthly payment is $12,000. At that pace, payoff occurs in roughly 56 months. If revenue doubles, payoff accelerates proportionally.

Who RBF Is Best For

  • SaaS and subscription businesses with predictable MRR/ARR
  • E-commerce brands (DTC, Amazon, Shopify sellers) with steady sales volume
  • Seasonal businesses that need payment flexibility
  • Founders who want no equity dilution and no personal guarantees
  • Businesses with limited operating history that cannot access SBA or bank loans
Advisor Strategy Note

RBF sits in a specific slot in your capital stack. It is best used as bridge capital — when you need funds faster than SBA timelines (30–90 days) and cannot yet qualify for traditional bank products. The ideal trajectory is: start with 0% business credit cards and net-30 tradelines to build your profile, use RBF to accelerate growth, then refinance into SBA or bank LOC products once you have 2+ years in business, $250K+ revenue, and 680+ FICO. RBF should never be your permanent capital solution.

Who RBF Is NOT Right For

  • Businesses with irregular or very early-stage revenue (often ineligible)
  • Companies needing large-scale financing ($10M+) at the lowest possible rates
  • Businesses that prefer predictable fixed monthly payments
  • Any business that can qualify for an SBA loan at 9–14% APR (it will always be cheaper long-term)

RBF vs. MCA: Know the Difference Before You Sign

Despite surface similarities, revenue-based financing and merchant cash advances are fundamentally different instruments — legally, structurally, and in terms of borrower risk. Confusing the two is one of the most expensive mistakes a business owner can make (Singer Law Group).

RBF vs. MCA — side-by-side comparison
FeatureRevenue-Based FinancingMerchant Cash Advance
Legal StructureLoan or investment agreement"Purchase of future receivables" — not a loan
RepaymentMonthly (% of total revenue)Daily or weekly ACH debits
Cost of CapitalEffective APR 15%–40%Effective APR 70%–150%+
Legal ProtectionsGreater transparency; amortization schedulesLimited; often includes Confessions of Judgment
UCC FilingsCommon; typically blanket lienUniversal; blanket lien on all assets
RegulationSubject to commercial lending lawsHistorically unregulated (not a "loan")
Enforcement RiskLower; typically civil litigationHigh; COJ enables account freeze without trial
Stacking RiskModerateHigh — leads to debt spirals

Sources: Singer Law Group, REIL Capital

Critical Warning

MCAs exploit a legal argument that they are not loans but "purchases" of future revenue — which historically allowed them to sidestep usury laws and Truth-in-Lending Act requirements. Courts are increasingly challenging this structure, and state disclosure laws in California, New York, Connecticut, and Louisiana now treat MCAs as loans for disclosure purposes. If a lender uses daily ACH debits and factor rates instead of APR, you are almost certainly looking at an MCA, not RBF (Maynard Nexsen).

UCC Liens: What Every Business Owner Must Know

A UCC-1 financing statement is a public notice filed with your state's Secretary of State office. When a lender files a UCC-1, it publicly establishes their legal claim (lien) on specific business assets as collateral for a financing agreement (Wolters Kluwer).

TypeScopeImpact on Future Borrowing
Blanket LienALL business assets (current and future)Severe — blocks most additional financing
Specific CollateralNamed assets only (e.g., equipment, A/R)Moderate — leaves other assets available
Advisor Strategy Note

What most people don't know: A blanket UCC lien from one fintech lender can prevent you from opening business credit cards, getting SBA loans, or accessing any other secured financing. Before accepting any RBF or LOC offer, search existing UCC filings on your business (free via your Secretary of State website). After payoff, confirm the lender files a UCC-3 termination within 30 days. If they don't, you can file your own after sending an authenticated demand — the lender has 20 days to comply (Crestmont Capital, Capflow Funding).

UCC Checklist Before Accepting Any Financing

  1. Before applying: Search existing UCC filings on your business
  2. When evaluating an offer: Ask if it is a blanket lien or specific collateral lien
  3. During the loan: Keep records of outstanding lien amounts
  4. Upon payoff: Confirm the lender files UCC-3 termination within 30 days
  5. If lender is uncooperative: Send authenticated demand; lender has 20 days to terminate

Stacking Rules: Can You Have Multiple RBF Products?

"Capital stacking" — combining two or more funding sources simultaneously — is technically possible but carries significant risks. Understanding the rules is critical to building a safe, productive capital stack (CFG Merchant Solutions).

Capital stacking safety matrix
ScenarioSafetyNotes
RBF + bank LOC (low utilization)Generally OKVerify no covenant breach
RBF + equipment loan (separate collateral)Generally OKDifferent collateral pools can coexist
RBF + second RBF from different lenderRiskyBoth draw from same revenue; can strain cash flow
MCA + MCA (stacking)DangerousClassic debt spiral pattern
Any financing + existing blanket UCC lienProblematicSecond lender cannot secure assets
Advisor Strategy Note

The safe stacking approach: Use RBF from one lender for general working capital, and pair it with an equipment loan (separate collateral) or a low-utilization bank LOC. Never take two products that both draw from the same daily/monthly revenue stream. Many RBF agreements explicitly prohibit additional senior secured debt without lender consent — breaching this covenant can trigger default. Read every agreement's cross-default and negative covenant clauses before signing.

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Regulatory Landscape: State Disclosure Laws Are Changing Everything

A wave of state laws passed since 2018 now requires MCA/RBF/alternative lenders to provide consumer-style disclosures including estimated APR, total cost, and repayment terms (JD Supra). This significantly increases transparency for small business borrowers.

State commercial financing disclosure laws (as of March 2026)
StateLawEffectiveCoverageKey Requirement
CaliforniaSB 1235 / CCFDLDec 2022Up to $500KTotal cost, APR, payment method, prepayment terms
New YorkNYCFDLAug 2023Up to $2.5MTILA-like disclosures at time of offer
ConnecticutCT Commercial Disclosure2024Up to $250KDisclosures + annual broker registration
LouisianaLA RBF DisclosureAug 2025No dollar capFirst state with no exemptions; broadest coverage
UtahUT Commercial DisclosurePendingUp to $1MFramework enacted; regulations in progress
VirginiaVA Commercial DisclosurePendingUp to $500KFramework enacted; regulations in progress

Sources: DFPI California, Holland & Knight, Pillsbury Law

The CFPB's enforcement posture toward fintech lenders shifted in 2025 toward state-led enforcement, meaning California's DFPI and New York's DFS are now the primary regulators (GT Law).

Advisor Strategy Note

What this means for you: If your business operates in California or New York, every RBF/MCA offer you receive must now include a standardized disclosure showing estimated APR. Use this to compare true costs across lenders. If a lender cannot or will not provide this disclosure, that is a red flag — they may not be operating within compliance.

True Cost Comparison: RBF vs. LOC vs. SBA vs. 0% Cards

Before choosing an RBF provider, understand where it sits in the broader cost spectrum. As of March 2026, according to NerdWallet:

Business financing cost comparison (March 2026)
Product TypeRate RangeSpeedCredit Required
0% Business Credit Cards0% for 9–21 monthsInstant680+
SBA 7(a) Variable9.75%–13.25% APR30–90 days680+
SBA 7(a) Fixed11.75%–14.75% APR30–90 days680+
Bank LOC6.3%–11.5% APR2–4 weeks700+
Fintech LOC (Tier 1)10%–95% APRSame day600–660+
RBF (Tier 2)15%–40% eff. APR24 hoursNone–500+
Equipment Financing4%–45% APR3–10 days600+
MCA (Tier 3)70%–150%+ eff. APRSame day500+

Tier 1: Fintech Business Lines of Credit

These are the established fintech lenders offering revolving lines of credit. They are not technically RBF — they function more like traditional LOCs — but they serve the same market of businesses that need faster, more accessible capital than banks provide.

Bluevine

bluevine.com

Bluevine is one of the most recognized names in fintech small business lending, offering a revolving line of credit up to $250,000. Unlike pure RBF, Bluevine operates as a traditional LOC with draw-and-repay functionality (NerdWallet).

FeatureDetails
Max Amount$250,000 (revolving)
APR Range14%–95% (Bluevine)
Repayment26 or 52 weekly payments per draw
Min Credit Score625 FICO
Min Revenue$120,000/year ($10K/month)
Min Time in Business12 months
Credit CheckSoft pull (prequalification) → Hard pull (acceptance)
Reports Business CreditYes — Experian Business
Personal GuaranteeRequired
Funding SpeedSame day
Relationship RequiredNo — any business bank account

Real user feedback: Trustpilot 4.4/5 stars with 1,000+ reviews. Reddit users report smooth onboarding but note that higher draws can see rates toward the upper end of the range. One Redditor noted: "Got a $50K line at around 20% APR. Not amazing but the speed was worth it for my situation" (r/loansforsmallbusiness, Trustpilot).

Advisor Strategy Note

Why Bluevine matters for your capital stack: It reports to Experian Business, which means every on-time payment builds your business credit profile. This makes Bluevine a dual-purpose tool — working capital plus credit building. Draw conservatively and repay on time to strengthen your profile for larger products later. The 14% floor rate is competitive with many bank LOCs, but only the strongest applicants see it.

Fundbox

fundbox.com

Fundbox offers one of the lowest barriers to entry among Tier 1 lenders, with a 600 minimum credit score and just 3 months in business. Lines of credit up to $250,000 with 12 or 24-week repayment terms (WSJ BuySide).

FeatureDetails
Max Amount$250,000 (revolving)
APR Range10.1%–79.8% (NerdWallet)
Repayment12 or 24 weekly payments per draw
Min Credit Score600 FICO
Min Revenue~$3,000/month ($36K/year)
Min Time in Business3 months
Credit CheckSoft pull → Hard pull at acceptance
Reports Business CreditLimited disclosure
Funding SpeedNext business day
Relationship RequiredNo

Capital stack role: Fundbox is an excellent starter LOC for newer businesses (3+ months) that cannot yet qualify for Bluevine or OnDeck (12 months required). The 10.1% floor APR is extremely competitive, though most borrowers will see rates in the 20–50% range. The short 12–24 week repayment terms keep total cost contained but require higher weekly payments.

OnDeck

ondeck.com

OnDeck offers both a revolving line of credit (up to $200K) and term loans (up to $250K). The LOC product features instant funding via OnDeck's dedicated account and reports to business credit bureaus (OnDeck).

FeatureLine of CreditTerm Loan
Max Amount$200,000$250,000
APR Range~8%–60%+ (draw fee model)~35%–100%+
RepaymentRevolving; 12–24 month term per drawDaily or weekly; 3–24 months
Min Credit Score625 FICO625 FICO
Min Revenue$100,000/year$100,000/year
Min Time in Business12 months12 months
Credit CheckSoft pull onlySoft pull only
Reports Business CreditYesYes
Funding SpeedInstant/24 hoursSame day

Real user feedback: Trustpilot 4.7/5 stars with 6,400+ reviews. However, Reddit paints a more nuanced picture. One user warned: "I went with OnDeck in a moment of desperation... The daily payments are killing me" (r/Businessloans). Another noted: "Fast funding, real reviews from what I can tell, just be prepared for higher costs than a bank" (r/loansforsmallbusiness).

Important: OnDeck Term Loan Warning

What most people don't know: OnDeck's term loan uses daily or weekly automatic debits, not monthly payments. For a $50K loan at a 1.3 factor rate over 12 months, that is approximately $217/day in ACH debits from your business account. If your cash flow is inconsistent, this can create serious pressure. The LOC product is generally safer because you control when and how much you draw.

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American Express Business Blueprint (formerly Kabbage)

americanexpress.com/blueprint

After acquiring Kabbage in 2020, Amex relaunched it as American Express Business Blueprint. It offers lines of credit up to $250,000 with some of the lowest floor APRs in the fintech LOC space — starting at 3% for 6-month terms (Amex Blueprint Fees).

FeatureDetails
Max Amount$250,000
APR Range3%–36% estimated (monthly fee model)
Repayment6, 12, 18, or 24 month terms per draw; auto-pay from bank account
Min Credit Score660 FICO
Min Revenue$3,000/month ($36K/year)
Min Time in Business12 months
Credit CheckHard pull (personal credit)
Reports toPersonal credit bureaus (consumer credit reporting)
Funding SpeedSame day (if you have an Amex account)
Credit Strategy Warning

What most people don't know: Amex Blueprint reports to personal consumer credit bureaus, not business bureaus. This means your utilization, payment history, and balance appear on your personal credit report. A high utilization on a $250K LOC can significantly lower your personal FICO score, which may affect your ability to get other credit products. Bluevine and OnDeck are better choices if protecting your personal credit profile is a priority.

Biz2Credit

biz2credit.com

Biz2Credit is a marketplace lender offering term loans, working capital, lines of credit up to $500K, revenue-based financing, and SBA loan facilitation. It connects borrowers with its network of lending partners (Biz2Credit RBF).

ProductAmountMin CreditMin RevenueMin Time
Term LoanUp to $500K660$100K/yr15 months
Working CapitalUp to $500K575$100K/yr6 months
Line of CreditUp to $500K650$100K/yr15 months
RBFVariesVariesVariesVaries
SBA LoansUp to $5M650+Varies2 years

Sources: Biz2Credit Term Loans, Biz2Credit SBA

Capital stack role: Biz2Credit is a gateway lender — their marketplace model means your application gets matched to multiple lenders, potentially surfacing better offers than applying to a single provider. The SBA loan facilitation is particularly valuable for businesses that meet SBA criteria but don't know where to apply. Funding speed is 24 hours for most products.

Tier 2: Revenue-Based & Alternative Lenders

These are true revenue-based financing providers. Unlike Tier 1 LOCs, they underwrite primarily on revenue data rather than credit scores, and repayment is tied directly to business performance.

Clearco

clear.co

Clearco (formerly Clearbanc) is one of the largest pure-play RBF providers, specializing in e-commerce and SaaS businesses. It offers funding up to $20 million with flat fees of 6–12.5% and no personal guarantee, no credit check, and no equity dilution (Clearco).

FeatureDetails
Max Amount$20,000,000
Fee Structure6%–12.5% flat fee (no compounding interest)
RepaymentFixed % of daily revenue until cap reached
Min Revenue$100,000/month
Min Time in Business12 months
Credit CheckNone
Personal GuaranteeNone
Equity RequiredNone
Funding Speed24 hours
Target MarketE-commerce (Shopify, Amazon) and SaaS

Clearco also offers an early payment option — if you repay the full balance ahead of schedule, you pay a reduced fee (as low as 6% vs. the standard 12.5%). This is one of the few RBF products that actually rewards early payoff (Clearco Blog).

Advisor Strategy Note

Clearco is the gold standard for funded e-commerce brands. No credit check, no personal guarantee, no equity — it is the cleanest capital available for businesses doing $100K+/month in revenue. The 6–12.5% flat fee translates to a very low effective APR when paid quickly. However, Clearco does not report to business credit bureaus, so it won't help build your credit profile. Use it for growth capital, but maintain separate tradelines and credit products for credit building.

Pipe

pipe.com

Pipe operates differently from traditional RBF — it offers embedded capital through platform partnerships. Rather than applying directly, businesses access Pipe's capital through integrated platforms like Shopify, Toast, and other SaaS/commerce tools. In 2025, Pipe processed over $5.5 billion in capital advances across its partner network (Pipe Year in Review).

FeatureDetails
Max AmountVaries by platform partner
Fee StructureNot publicly disclosed; negotiated per partner
Credit CheckNone — uses transaction data
Funding SpeedSame day
Target MarketUsers of Pipe partner platforms (restaurants, SaaS, e-commerce)

Capital stack role: Pipe is essentially an invisible capital layer — you may already have access to it through your existing business tools without knowing it. Check whether your payment processor, POS system, or SaaS platform partners with Pipe. The embedded model means faster approval with less friction than standalone applications (Pipe).

Lighter Capital

lightercapital.com

Lighter Capital is the premier RBF provider for SaaS and technology companies. It offers up to $4 million per funding round with a total cap of $10 million, repaid as a monthly percentage of revenue. No personal guarantee required, no equity dilution, and no board seat given up (Lighter Capital FAQ).

FeatureDetails
Max Per Round$4,000,000
Total Cap$10,000,000 (across multiple rounds)
Repayment Cap1.3x–1.5x original amount
Revenue Share2%–8% of monthly revenue
Min Revenue$15,000 MRR ($200K ARR)
Credit CheckNot prominently disclosed
Personal GuaranteeNone
Funding Speed3–4 weeks (diligence process)
Target MarketSaaS, technology, B2B software

Sources: Lighter Capital Blog, Capchase Review

Capital stack role: Lighter Capital fills the gap between seed funding and Series A for SaaS companies. The 1.3x–1.5x repayment cap means $500K in funding costs $650K–$750K total — significantly cheaper than giving up 10–20% equity at an early-stage valuation. The 3–4 week funding timeline is slower than fintech LOCs but appropriate for the diligence process at these amounts.

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Wayflyer

wayflyer.com

Wayflyer is a Dublin-headquartered RBF provider specializing in e-commerce and Amazon sellers. It offers funding up to $20 million with 5–10% flat fees, no credit check, and 24-hour funding. Trustpilot shows 4.8/5 stars with 400+ reviews (Trustpilot).

FeatureDetails
Max Amount$20,000,000
Fee Structure5%–10% flat fee
Min Revenue$10,000/month
Min Time in Business6 months
Credit CheckNone
Personal GuaranteeNone
Funding Speed24 hours
Target MarketE-commerce, Amazon FBA, DTC brands

Sources: Finder, Wayflyer

Wayflyer vs. Clearco: Both target e-commerce. Wayflyer has a lower revenue minimum ($10K/month vs. Clearco's $100K/month) and lower flat fee range (5–10% vs. 6–12.5%). Clearco has higher maximum funding ($20M each) but requires more revenue history. For Amazon sellers specifically, Wayflyer's deeper Amazon integration makes it the better first choice.

Credibly

credibly.com

Credibly is a broad-market alternative lender offering 7 product types, including working capital loans, MCAs, business expansion loans, SBA loans, and equipment financing. Credit scores as low as 500 are accepted, making it one of the most accessible lenders for businesses with credit challenges (Credibly).

ProductAmountTermsCost
Working Capital$5K–$600K3–24 monthsFactor rate from 1.09
MCAUp to $600KDaily/weekly repaymentFactor rate from 1.09 + $50/mo admin fee
Business ExpansionUp to $600K12–36 monthsVaries
SBA LoansUp to $5MSBA termsSBA rates
Equipment Financing$25K–$10M2–7 yearsVaries

Eligibility: Minimum 500 credit score, $15,000/month in revenue, 6 months in business. Approval in as little as 2 hours with funding within 4 hours of approval. WSJ BuySide rates Credibly 4.3/5 stars (WSJ BuySide).

Factor Rate Warning

What most people don't know: Credibly uses factor rates, not APR. A factor rate of 1.09 on a $100K loan means you repay $109K — but over just 6 months, the effective APR is roughly 18%. Over 3 months, it is effectively 36%+. Factor rates always look cheaper than they are because they do not account for the time value of money. Ask for the APR equivalent before signing — California and New York now require it by law.

National Funding

nationalfunding.com

National Funding is a San Diego-based direct lender specializing in working capital loans and equipment financing for small businesses. Operating since 1999, it offers a notable early repayment discount — 7% off the remaining balance if paid within the first 100 days (Forbes Advisor).

ProductAmountTermsFactor Rate
Working Capital$10K–$500K4 months – 2 yearsStarting at 1.11
Equipment FinancingUp to $150K2–5 yearsStarting at 1.11

Eligibility: Minimum 600 credit score (recommended), $250,000 in annual gross sales, 6 months in business. Funding in 24 hours. Equipment financing uses monthly payments (not daily/weekly) and requires no down payment (National Funding).

Capital stack role: National Funding's equipment financing product is one of the few Tier 2 options with monthly payments and multi-year terms (up to 5 years). This makes it stackable alongside a shorter-term LOC or RBF product without creating daily payment conflicts. The 7% early payoff discount is rare in this market segment.

Tier 3: MCA Providers — Proceed with Extreme Caution

The following section covers lenders in the riskiest segment of the market: merchant cash advance providers with documented legal issues, extremely high effective APRs, or limited borrower protections. This section is a warning reference — not a recommendation.

Critical Warning: MCA Debt Spirals

The #1 trap in business funding is MCA stacking. Here is how it works: a business takes an MCA, the daily debits strain cash flow, so they take a second MCA to cover the first. Then a third. Within months, 30–50% of daily revenue is going to MCA payments, the business cannot operate, and the only options are default or bankruptcy. If a broker is pushing you toward an MCA, especially if you already have one — stop and get independent advice first.

CAN Capital

cancapital.com

CAN Capital is one of the oldest MCA and working capital providers (founded 1998) but has received significant negative reviews. Key concerns include UCC liens filed without clear disclosure, lack of rate transparency, and aggressive collections. Not BBB accredited (BBB).

"If I had known they were going to file a UCC LIEN ON ME, until balance was paid off I never would have done business with this company. This has ruined my credit with card companies." — Trustpilot review

Yellowstone Capital — FTC Enforcement Action

Yellowstone Capital became the most prominent cautionary tale in the MCA industry when the Federal Trade Commission sued it in 2020 and obtained a $9.8 million settlement — the largest MCA-related enforcement action to date. Yellowstone continued withdrawing funds from business bank accounts after borrowers had fully repaid, affecting thousands of businesses. The FTC distributed refunds to 7,731 businesses averaging ~$1,200+ per business (FTC Case, FTC Refunds).

Square Loans (Embedded MCA)

squareup.com/banking

Square Loans uses a flat fee and percentage-of-revenue repayment that resembles RBF, but it is structurally an MCA — repayment is tied to daily credit card sales through Square, not total revenue. Loans from $100 to $350,000, no prepayment penalty, but full balance must be repaid within 18 months. Square merchants only. Reddit users report "wildly inconsistent" fee rates across successive loans with no clear explanation (NerdWallet, Reddit).

Advisor Strategy Note

Square Loans is in Tier 3 because of its structural classification, not necessarily its cost. The flat fee model is simple and the integration with Square makes it frictionless. However, it does not report to credit bureaus, it requires an existing Square processing relationship, and the fee inconsistency across loans is a real concern. If you are already a Square merchant doing $10K+ in annual processing, it can be a reasonable bridge product — just understand you are taking an MCA, not a loan.

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Quick-Reference Comparison Tables

Tier 1 — Fintech LOC Products at a Glance

LenderMax AmountAPR RangeMin CreditMin RevenueReports Biz Credit?Funding
Bluevine$250K14%–95%625$120K/yrYes (Experian)Same day
Fundbox$250K10.1%–79.8%600~$3K/moLimitedNext day
OnDeck LOC$200K~8%–60%+625$100K/yrYesInstant
Amex Blueprint$250K3%–36% est.660$3K/moPersonal onlySame day
Biz2Credit LOC$500KNot disclosed650$100K/yrNot disclosed24 hours

Tier 2 — Revenue-Based Lenders at a Glance

LenderMax AmountCostMin RevenueCredit CheckTarget MarketFunding
Clearco$20M6%–12.5% flat$100K/moNoneE-commerce, SaaS24 hours
PipeVariesNot disclosedVariesNonePlatform usersSame day
Lighter Capital$4M/$10M1.3x–1.5x cap$15K MRRNot disclosedSaaS/Tech3–4 weeks
Wayflyer$20M5%–10% flat$10K/moNoneE-commerce24 hours
Credibly$600K1.09+ factor$15K/mo500+General SMB4 hours
National Funding$500K1.11+ factor$250K/yr600+General SMB24 hours

Credit Reporting Summary

LenderReports Personal?Reports Business?Bureau(s)
BluevineOn defaultYesExperian Business
FundboxNot disclosedLimitedNot specified
OnDeckOn defaultYesBusiness bureaus
Amex BlueprintYes (normal)NoConsumer bureaus
ClearcoNo checkNoN/A
WayflyerNo checkNoN/A
Lighter CapitalNot disclosedNot disclosedNot specified
CrediblyNot disclosedNot disclosedNot specified

Market Data: Federal Reserve & Fintech Lending Trends

The Federal Reserve's 2024 Small Business Credit Survey found that more than 9 in 10 small business employer firms experienced financial or operational challenges in 2023. Financing applications declined year-over-year, while approval rates remained flat. Small banks and credit unions had the highest satisfaction scores; online-lender applicants were the least satisfied.

The FDIC's 2024 Small Business Lending Survey confirmed that banks remain the primary formal credit source, but fintech lenders have captured significant market share in the under-$250,000 loan segment where bank approval rates are lowest — precisely the segment where RBF thrives.

Advisor Strategy Note

What the data tells us: The fintech lending market exists because banks have a structural gap in the $25K–$250K range. They cannot profitably underwrite small loans fast enough. RBF fills this gap, but the lower satisfaction scores for online lenders are real — mostly driven by higher costs and less transparent terms. The strategy is to use fintech/RBF products as stepping stones while building the credit profile and operating history needed for bank and SBA products. That is what capital stacking is about.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is revenue-based financing and how does it work?

A UCC-1 filing establishes a lender's legal claim on your business assets. Blanket UCCs block additional financing. Always verify UCC-3 termination within 30 days of payoff.

Revenue-based financing (RBF) is a form of non-dilutive funding where a business receives upfront capital and repays it as a fixed percentage of ongoing revenue until a predetermined repayment cap (typically 1.1x to 3.0x the original amount) is reached. Payments automatically scale with your revenue — higher in strong months, lower in slow months. Unlike traditional loans, there are no fixed monthly payments, and unlike equity financing, you surrender no ownership (Re:cap).

What is the difference between RBF and a merchant cash advance?

RBF costs 15-40% effective APR with legal protections. MCAs cost 70-150%+ APR with daily debits, confessions of judgment, and blanket UCCs — far more predatory.

RBF is typically structured as a loan with monthly payments tied to total revenue, often at effective APRs of 15–40%. MCAs are structured as "purchases of future receivables" with daily or weekly ACH debits from card sales, often at effective APRs of 70–150%+. MCAs frequently include confessions of judgment and blanket UCC liens, have fewer legal protections, and are historically unregulated because they are technically not loans (Singer Law Group).

What credit score do you need for revenue-based financing?

Pure RBF providers (Clearco, Wayflyer) require no credit score at all. Fintech LOCs like Bluevine and OnDeck require 625+. Credibly accepts scores as low as 500.

It varies widely. Pure RBF providers like Clearco and Wayflyer require no credit score — they underwrite entirely on revenue data. Fintech LOC providers like Bluevine and OnDeck typically require 625+ FICO. Fundbox accepts 600+. Credibly goes as low as 500. The lower the credit score requirement, the higher the cost of capital.

Does revenue-based financing report to business credit bureaus?

Inconsistently. Bluevine and OnDeck report to Experian Business. Many pure RBF providers (Clearco, Wayflyer, Pipe) don't report to any bureau at all.

Most RBF and fintech lenders have inconsistent credit reporting. Bluevine reports to Experian Business. OnDeck reports to business bureaus. But many RBF providers (Clearco, Wayflyer, Pipe) do not report at all, meaning the financing does not help build your business credit profile. If building business credit is part of your strategy, verify reporting practices before accepting any offer.

Can you stack multiple revenue-based financing products?

Yes, but carefully. Combining different collateral types works well. Stacking products that draw from the same revenue stream strains cash flow dangerously.

Yes, but carefully. Combining different financing types secured by different collateral (e.g., equipment loan + LOC) is generally safe. However, stacking multiple products that draw from the same revenue can strain cash flow. Many RBF agreements prohibit additional senior secured debt without lender consent. Never stack multiple MCAs — this is a classic debt spiral pattern (CFG Merchant Solutions).

What is a UCC lien and how does it affect my business?

A UCC-1 filing establishes a lender's legal claim on your business assets. Blanket UCCs block additional financing. Always verify UCC-3 termination within 30 days of payoff.

A UCC-1 financing statement is a public notice establishing a lender's legal claim on your business assets as collateral. A blanket UCC lien covers all current and future assets, potentially blocking additional financing. Always ask whether a lender files a blanket or specific collateral lien, and verify UCC-3 termination is filed within 30 days of full repayment (Wolters Kluwer).

Which RBF lender is best for e-commerce businesses?

Clearco (6-12.5% fee, up to $20M, $100K/month minimum) and Wayflyer (5-10% fee, up to $20M, $10K/month minimum) dominate e-commerce. Wayflyer has stronger Amazon integration.

Clearco (6–12.5% flat fee, up to $20M, $100K/month minimum) and Wayflyer (5–10% flat fee, up to $20M, $10K/month minimum) are purpose-built for e-commerce. Wayflyer has stronger Amazon integration and a lower revenue floor. Both underwrite on sales data with no credit check required.

Is RBF better than an SBA loan?

If SBA-eligible, SBA is cheaper (9.75-14.75% APR). But SBA requires 2+ years in business, 680+ credit, and 30-90 days to close. RBF fills the speed gap.

If you qualify for an SBA loan, it will almost always be cheaper (9.75–14.75% APR). However, SBA loans require 2+ years in business, 680+ credit, and 30–90 days to fund. RBF fills the gap for businesses needing faster capital, shorter operating histories, or that cannot meet SBA requirements. In a capital stack, use RBF as bridge capital, then refinance into SBA or bank products as your business matures.

How can I check if I have existing UCC liens?

Search your state's Secretary of State website for UCC filings under your business name and EIN. This search is typically free and filings are public record.

Search your state's Secretary of State website for UCC filings under your business name and EIN. This is typically free. You can also use paid services for comprehensive searches across all states. Check before applying for any new financing — existing liens can affect approval and terms. Alternatively, start monitoring your business credit at Credit Blueprint, our free credit monitoring platform that helps you track business credit health.

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