14 million women-owned businesses in the US. $2.7 trillion in revenue. 12.2 million employees. And still a fraction of the funding that male-owned businesses receive. This guide covers every funding option available in 2026 -- what actually works, what's a waste of time, and what you need to qualify for each.
We're not going to sugarcoat anything. You want capital with fair terms, fast. Here's how to get it.
The Numbers in 2026
National Women's Business Council data: women-owned businesses grew 58% since 2007 versus 12% for all businesses. Women of color own 50% of all women-owned businesses, growing even faster.
But only 2% of venture capital goes to women entrepreneurs. Women get approved for smaller amounts than men at the same revenue levels. And a lot of women don't even apply because they expect a denial based on past experience.
Why the Gap Exists
Women-owned businesses have comparable or better survival rates than average. The funding gap has nothing to do with viability. It's structural.
Women disproportionately start service businesses. Service businesses have less physical collateral -- no heavy equipment, no real estate. Banks want collateral. No collateral, no funding, even if you're doing $80K/month in revenue.
Women also start businesses younger now, which means thinner personal credit files. A 28-year-old with a $50,000/month business and a 620 score is a strong funding candidate. But the bank sees 620 and moves on.
Cash-flow-based funding ignores all of that. No collateral requirement. No credit history length requirement. One question: does your business deposit consistent revenue? If yes, you're fundable.
Every Option, Ranked by Accessibility
1. SBA Programs
SBA 7(a) loans: up to $5 million, 5.5% to 8% rates, terms up to 25 years. Microloans: up to $50,000, 8% to 13%. The Women's Business Centers (WBCs) network has 140+ locations with free training, counseling, and lending connections.
Cheapest capital available. Also the hardest to get. You need a 680+ credit score, 2+ years in business, collateral, tax returns, financial statements, and a business plan. Takes 60 to 90 days. Approval rate: about 50%. Better than banks, but still a coin flip.
2. Grants
Free money. No repayment. Several programs target women specifically:
- Amber Grant: $10,000 monthly, $25,000 annual. Any industry.
- IFundWomen Universal Grant Database: Aggregates thousands of grants for women entrepreneurs.
- Tory Burch Foundation Fellows Program: $5,000 plus education and networking.
- SBA InnovateHER Challenge: Up to $40,000 for products impacting women and families.
- State programs: Check your state's small business development office.
Reality: acceptance rates are often below 5%. Most grants are $1,000 to $25,000. Application process takes months. Worth applying for. Don't plan around them.
3. Merchant Cash Advance (MCA)
Fastest path to capital. Purchase of your future receivables -- lump sum now, small daily remittance from your revenue to repay.
Westline requirements: $15,000+/month in revenue, 6+ months in business, three months of bank statements. No credit score, no collateral, no tax returns. Funded in 24 to 48 hours. $5,000 to $2,000,000.
Costs more than SBA -- factor rates of 1.15 to 1.45. But approval rate is ~85% with sufficient revenue, and you have the money in days. If you need capital now, the speed usually justifies the premium.
4. CDFIs
Community Development Financial Institutions -- mission-driven lenders serving underserved communities. Rates between bank and MCA, typically 8% to 15%. More flexible on credit than banks. Processing: 2 to 6 weeks. Amounts: $5,000 to $250,000. Good middle ground if you have some time but can't qualify at a bank.
5. Revenue-Based Financing
Like MCA but with a fixed daily or weekly payment. Needs $20,000+/month revenue. Terms: 4 to 24 months. Comparable cost to MCA. More predictable repayment schedule.
6. Business Lines of Credit
Draw capital as needed, pay only on what you use. Typically requires 600+ FICO and 1+ year in business. Rates: 10% to 36%. Good for irregular cash flow or seasonal needs.
Qualification Requirements at a Glance
SBA: 680+ credit, 2+ years in business, collateral, 2 years tax returns, financial statements, business plan. 60-90 days.
Grants: Written application, business plan, impact demonstration. 1-6 months. Under 5% acceptance.
MCA (Westline): $15,000+/month revenue, 6+ months in business, 3 months bank statements. No credit minimum, no collateral. 24-48 hours. ~85% approval.
CDFIs: 580+ credit (varies), 1+ year in business, basic financial docs. 2-6 weeks.
What to Watch Out For
Hidden markups. Some funding companies add layers of cost you don't see. Go direct. Westline is a direct funder — one fee structure, fully disclosed.
Pay-to-apply programs. If someone charges you a fee to access grants or funding, that's a red flag. Legitimate programs don't charge application fees.
"For women" products with above-market rates. Some funders slap a women-focused label on their standard product and charge more. Good funding has good terms regardless of who it's marketed to. Don't pay a premium for branding.
Stacking advances. Multiple advances at once can crush your cash flow. One well-structured deal beats two stacked together.
Hidden fees. Get every cost in writing before signing. Origination fees, closing fees, processing fees. If a funder won't give you a transparent breakdown, leave.
Resources Worth Your Time
- SBA Women's Business Centers: Free counseling, training, lending connections. 140+ locations. sba.gov/local-assistance
- SCORE: Free mentoring from experienced business owners. Thousands of mentors, in-person and online. score.org
- NAWBO: Networking and advocacy for women business owners.
- WBENC: Certification that opens doors to Fortune 500 supplier diversity contracts. Worth the effort.
- SBDCs: Free consulting and market research. Nearly 1,000 locations nationwide.
WBENC certification specifically: many Fortune 500 companies actively seek women-owned suppliers. That certification can create revenue streams that make all future funding easier.
Picking the Right Path
Three questions determine your best option. How fast do you need the money? How strong is your credit? How much paperwork can you provide?
Great credit, plenty of time, willingness to produce documents: start with SBA. Cheapest capital available.
Need capital in 48 hours, imperfect credit, no collateral: MCA from a direct funder like Westline. Funded on your revenue, not your credit report.
Planning ahead with no urgency: apply for grants, explore CDFIs. The money exists, but it takes patience.
Whichever path: go direct, get every fee in writing. And don't let a bank denial stop you. Banks deny 82% of small businesses. That's a problem with the bank, not with your business.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the easiest funding to qualify for?
MCA. $15,000+/month in revenue, 6+ months in business, no credit score requirement, no collateral. Funded in 24 to 48 hours. Grants require no repayment but under 5% acceptance rates. SBA has good rates but takes 60 to 90 days and requires 680+ credit.
Are there grants specifically for women-owned businesses?
Yes. Amber Grant ($10,000 monthly), IFundWomen database, Tory Burch Foundation Fellows ($5,000), SBA InnovateHER (up to $40,000), plus state-level programs. Competitive though -- acceptance rates under 5%, amounts usually $1,000 to $25,000.
Do women get better SBA rates?
No. SBA rates are the same regardless of gender: 5.5% to 8%. But the SBA funds Women's Business Centers that provide free training and help navigate applications. The rates don't change, but the access support is real.
How much can I get through an MCA?
$5,000 to $2,000,000 at Westline. Based on revenue and cash flow consistency. A business doing $30,000/month might qualify for $20K to $60K. A business at $150,000/month might get $100K to $300K. Gender, credit score, and collateral aren't factors.
What should I watch out for?
Same things any business owner should: hidden markups, undisclosed fees, stacking multiple advances, and funding amounts your cash flow can't support. Be especially wary of "women-focused" products that charge above-market rates. Good terms are good terms regardless of the marketing label.