The best option depends on use of funds, cash flow, and timeline. Below are common categories for firms with $15k+ monthly revenue.
SBA 7(a) Loan: Versatile, Longer Terms
The SBA 7(a) loan is a flagship program for working capital, equipment, leasehold improvements, refinancing, and acquisitions—often up to $5 million. Interest rates are typically indexed to the WSJ Prime plus a spread; exact pricing depends on lender, loan size, and term.
- Use cases: Working capital, partner buyouts, business acquisition, refinancing high-cost debt
- Typical terms: Up to 10 years for working capital; up to 25 years for real estate
- Benefits: Longer amortization may lower monthly payments vs. conventional loans
- Considerations: More documentation and underwriting time
Deep dive: Read the complete SBA loan guide and the faster-track SBA Express loan overview.
SBA 504 Loan: Fixed Assets and Owner-Occupied Real Estate
The SBA 504 combines bank financing with a Certified Development Company (CDC) loan—commonly used for real estate and large equipment. Many Wyoming manufacturers, logistics firms, and hospitality businesses consider 504 for facility purchases.
- Use cases: Owner-occupied real estate, heavy equipment, facility expansion
- Benefits: Long fixed-rate CDC portion, lower down payment vs. conventional
- Considerations: Primarily for fixed assets, not general working capital
Conventional Term Loan for Small Business
For established, profitable firms with strong banking relationships, a conventional Term Loan can be straightforward with competitive pricing.
- Use cases: Equipment purchases, buildouts, marketing initiatives with clear ROI
- Benefits: Predictable payments, potential rate discounts with collateral
- Considerations: May require higher credit scores and stronger financial ratios
Learn more: Term loan for small business.
Business Line of Credit: Flexibility for Seasonality
Wyoming hospitality and tourism sectors often benefit from a revolving Business Line of Credit to buy inventory, manage payroll gaps, and ramp for peak season.
- Use cases: Short-term working capital, purchase orders, payroll bridging
- Benefits: Pay interest only on what you draw
- Considerations: Annual renewals and financial reporting may apply
Resource: Business line of credit guide.
Short Term Business Loan: Speed Over Tenure
When timing is critical—e.g., winning a contract, stocking inventory, or covering a surprise repair—a short-term online loan may fund faster than bank options.
- Use cases: Time-sensitive opportunities or urgent expenses
- Typical terms: 6–24 months, frequent repayment schedules
- Considerations: Higher effective cost; compare carefully vs. a line of credit
Equipment Financing: Vehicles, Machinery, and Tech
Equipment loans and leases can match the asset’s useful life and may require less upfront cash. For oilfield services, construction, agriculture, or fleet expansion, equipment financing is purpose-built.
- Benefits: Collateralized by the equipment, potentially faster underwriting
- Considerations: Equipment condition, age, and resale value impact terms
Explore: Equipment Financing and the in-depth equipment financing guide.
Invoice Factoring: Turn A/R into Working Capital
If you sell B2B and wait 30–90 days for payment, invoice factoring can accelerate cash flow without traditional debt.
- Benefits: Speed and scalability with sales growth
- Considerations: Fees tied to your customers’ credit and payment timelines
Revenue-Based Financing
Revenue-based structures repay as a small, agreed percentage of monthly sales, which can flex with seasonality.
- Benefits: Payments adjust with revenue volatility
- Considerations: Total cost may be higher vs. bank loans; best for high-margin businesses
Learn how it works: Revenue-Based Financing.
Merchant Cash Advance (MCA): Use Caution
MCAs provide an advance repaid from daily card sales. They can fund quickly but can be costly if stacked or used long term.
- Use cases: Short-term gaps when other credit is not accessible
- Considerations: Factor rates and daily/weekly remittances impact cash flow
Read before you decide: merchant cash advance.