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MCA vs Line of Credit

Different products for different problems. MCA wins on speed and credit floor. LOC wins on flexibility and cost.

An MCA and a business line of credit (LOC) are different products solving different problems. An MCA is a one-time lump sum repaid via daily ACH on a fixed factor rate. A line of credit is a revolving facility you can draw from, repay, and re-draw, with interest charged only on what you use.

The right choice depends on three things: how much credit history you have, how the capital will be used, and how fast you need it. Here's the side-by-side.

Product Structure — Side by Side

Feature MCA Line of Credit
Capital structureLump sum, one-timeRevolving, draw as needed
Cost basisFactor rate (1.18-1.45)APR (8-25%)
RepaymentDaily ACH or % of card salesMonthly minimum + interest
Term3-15 months typicalOpen-ended (annual review)
FICO floorNone (cash flow underwriting)650+ typical, 600+ for some online lenders
Time in business4+ months2+ years for banks, 1+ year for online
Funding speed24-48 hours7-30 days for new line; instant draws once approved
Personal guaranteeYesYes
Cost on $50K$15,000 over 8 months (1.30 factor)$2,500-$5,000/year if drawn (10-15% APR)

When MCA Wins

  • FICO under 650. LOCs require strong personal credit. MCA doesn't.
  • Need capital this week. LOC takes 7-30 days to set up; MCA funds in 24-48.
  • Business is under 2 years old. Most banks won't extend an LOC to a young business.
  • Use case is one-time. If you need $50K once for inventory or equipment, MCA is structurally cleaner than drawing $50K from a $50K LOC.
  • Cash flow has predictable revenue. Daily ACH works when revenue is daily. Monthly LOC payment works when revenue is lumpy.

When Line of Credit Wins

  • FICO 700+, 2+ years in business. You qualify for the cheap product. Take it.
  • Use case is recurring or seasonal. Inventory cycles, AR financing, payroll smoothing — these work better as revolving credit than as one-time MCAs.
  • Capital need is uncertain in size or timing. LOC lets you draw exactly what you need, when you need it.
  • Total cost matters more than speed. 10% APR < 1.30 factor on virtually any time horizon.
  • You want to build business credit. LOC reports to D&B and Experian Business; most MCAs don't report regularly.

Worked Example: $50K Inventory Need

Restaurant supplier needs $50K to buy 6 months of inventory. Two scenarios:

Scenario A: 720 FICO, 4 years in business

Eligible for both. Bank LOC at 10% APR. If drawn for 6 months and paid back: $50K × 10% × 0.5 = $2,500 cost. MCA at 1.28 factor: $50K × 0.28 = $14,000 cost. LOC wins by $11,500.

Scenario B: 580 FICO, 14 months in business

LOC unavailable. Only realistic option: MCA at 1.32 factor. $50K × 0.32 = $16,000 cost over 7 months. Without it, the inventory doesn't get bought, the business loses peak season revenue. MCA is the only option that exists.

Hybrid Strategy

Some businesses use both. MCA for immediate capital injection, then build business credit and apply for an LOC over the next 6-12 months. Once LOC is approved, future capital needs go through the LOC at much lower cost. The MCA was the bridge.

For businesses that already have an LOC, MCA only makes sense when the LOC is fully drawn or when speed exceeds the marginal cost difference (e.g., a same-day equipment opportunity that can't wait for LOC paperwork).

The Honest Recommendation

If you qualify for a line of credit at reasonable rates (under 15% APR), take it. If you don't, an MCA fills the gap that bank credit doesn't reach. The mistake is using an MCA when a cheaper LOC was available — and the equally common mistake is waiting 30 days for an LOC when 24-hour MCA funding could have prevented a payroll miss.

Sources & References

  • Bank denial and small business credit access figures cited in this piece are derived from the Federal Reserve Small Business Credit Survey. Approval rates for small business credit applications at large banks have ranged from approximately 13%-31% across recent survey years, depending on bank category and reporting period.
  • Small business finance landscape and lending program data: SBA Office of Advocacy.
  • Merchant cash advance industry standards and disclosure practices: Small Business Finance Association (SBFA).
  • Commercial financing disclosure regulations referenced (NY FAIR Act, CA SB 1235/666/362, VA, UT) are summarized from the published statutes; consult counsel for specific compliance application.

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