What is a merchant cash advance?
A merchant cash advance is a purchase of future receivables. You receive an upfront sum and agree to remit a fixed total through daily/weekly payments or a percentage of sales. It is not a traditional loan, and costs are typically quoted with a factor rate.
How do MCA rates work?
MCA rates use a factor rate (e.g., 1.30) applied to the advance to determine total payback. Because repayment is frequent and fast, the implied annualized cost is usually higher than the factor rate suggests. Always estimate an APR-equivalent to compare options.
What is the “daily factor rate” in an MCA?
Factor rates are not usually daily; they’re a fixed multiplier. What occurs daily is the remittance—via a fixed ACH debit or a percentage holdback from card sales. Some marketing materials refer to daily rates for simplicity, but the factor rate itself is generally a single, upfront figure.
How does an MCA impact cash flow?
MCAs reduce cash through daily or weekly remittances. If revenue dips or receivables slow, fixed debits can strain operations. Percentage-based holdbacks flex with sales but may extend the overall repayment period.
When is an MCA a good idea?
An MCA can make sense for time-sensitive uses with clear, near-term ROI—like urgent equipment repairs or fast-turn inventory buys—when speed is critical and short-term costs are outweighed by immediate gains.
What are better alternatives to an MCA?
Depending on your profile, alternatives include a business line of credit, short-term loan, SBA 7(a) or SBA Express, equipment financing, invoice factoring, or revenue-based financing. These may offer lower costs, monthly payments, or revolving access.
How do I compare MCA vs term loan?
Compare total dollar cost, payment cadence (daily/weekly vs monthly), expected term, and flexibility. Many established firms prefer monthly payments and potentially lower APRs with term loans when timing allows.