Below are common funding types U.S. consulting firms use. Compare typical features, timelines, and when each may fit best.
SBA 7(a) Loan
The SBA 7(a) loan is a government-guaranteed loan that can support working capital, debt refinancing, equipment, and acquisitions. It is popular with mature firms that want longer terms and competitive rates.
- Typical range: Up to $5 million
- Use cases: Practice acquisition, partner buyout, multi-year growth initiatives
- Considerations: More documentation, time to funding can be longer than online options
Learn more: SBA loan guide and SBA Express loan overview.
Traditional Term Loan for Small Business
Term loans provide a lump sum with fixed or variable rates and a predictable repayment schedule. Strong revenues and solid credit profiles often secure better terms.
- Best for: Hiring, software licenses, strategic investments with 18–60 month ROI
- Strengths: Predictable payments; can build business credit history
- Tradeoffs: May require collateral and established financials
Explore more: Term Loan and the guide on term loan for small business.
Business Line of Credit
A revolving business line of credit (LOC) provides draw flexibility for short-term needs, only accruing interest on the amount you use. Consulting firms often rely on LOCs to bridge receivables and manage payroll in growth sprints.
- Best for: Ongoing working capital, seasonal or project-based cash gaps
- Strengths: Interest on drawn funds only; reusable as you repay
- Tradeoffs: Variable rates; credit line reviews/renewals
Resource: Business line of credit guide and Business Line of Credit overview.
Short Term Business Loan
Short-term business loans are designed for quick access to capital and shorter payback periods. Costs can be higher than long-term products, but speed and simplicity are the draw.
- Best for: Time-sensitive projects, marketing sprints, or plugging urgent cash gaps
- Strengths: Faster timeline; streamlined documentation
- Tradeoffs: Higher effective APR; frequent payments
See more: Short-Term Online Loan overview.
Revenue-Based Financing (RBF)
RBF advances capital in exchange for a percentage of monthly revenue until a fixed amount is repaid. For agencies and tech consultancies with recurring revenue, this can align repayments with cash inflows.
- Best for: Subscription-driven firms, agencies with consistent MRR/ARR
- Strengths: Payments flex with revenue; non-dilutive
- Tradeoffs: Higher cost than traditional bank loans; requires steady revenue
Learn more: Revenue-Based Financing.
Invoice Factoring
Invoice factoring converts your accounts receivable into immediate working capital. Useful if clients pay on net-30/60/90 terms, but you need cash sooner for project delivery.
- Best for: Government or enterprise AR with predictable payment schedules
- Strengths: Speeds cash flow; based on invoice quality rather than only credit
- Tradeoffs: Discount fees reduce invoice yield; client notification may apply
Deep dive: invoice factoring guide.
Merchant Cash Advance (MCA)
MCA provides an advance repaid via a percentage of daily sales or fixed ACH. It’s a fast-working capital option, but total costs can be higher.
- Best for: Firms needing quick capital where other options are limited
- Strengths: Speed and revenue-based repayments
- Tradeoffs: Higher factor rates; frequent remittances impact cash flow
Read the guide: merchant cash advance.
Equipment and Technology Financing
Some consultancies require servers, specialized testing equipment, or studio gear. Equipment financing or leasing can spread costs over useful life.
- Best for: IT infrastructure, A/V equipment, field inspection tools
- Strengths: Preserves cash; may be secured by equipment
- Tradeoffs: Tied to asset; watch total cost of ownership
Explore: Equipment Financing and an in-depth equipment financing guide.