How to Get a Business Loan: Step-by-Step Guide
What lenders actually look for, what documents you need, and how to maximize your chances of approval — from application to funding.
Getting a business loan is not a single process — it’s a different experience depending on what you’re borrowing for, how long you’ve been in business, what your credit profile looks like, and which type of lender you approach. A restaurant owner seeking $50,000 in working capital and a contractor seeking $500,000 for equipment are both “getting a business loan,” but they’ll interact with completely different lenders, documentation requirements, and timelines.
This guide walks through the process step by step — from identifying the right loan type to reviewing your offer — with the goal of helping you arrive at a lender with a complete, competitive application.
Step 1: Determine What Type of Financing You Need
Before approaching any lender, identify what you’re actually trying to accomplish. The right loan type depends on your purpose:
- Recurring cash flow gaps (slow seasons, billing cycles, AR timing): Business line of credit
- One-time lump sum need (payroll bridge, supplier payment, emergency): Working capital loan
- Equipment or vehicle purchase: Equipment financing
- Defined capital investment (renovation, buildout, fleet addition): Term loan
- Long-term, large-scale growth (practice acquisition, real estate, major expansion): SBA loan
- Fast capital without collateral: Merchant Cash Advance
Borrowing the wrong product for your need is one of the most common mistakes — for example, using a high-cost working capital loan for a 5-year equipment purchase, or seeking an SBA loan for a cash flow gap that needs resolution in two weeks.
Step 2: Know Your Qualification Profile
Lenders evaluate several factors. Knowing where you stand before applying lets you choose the right lender and set realistic expectations.
Credit Score
Most lenders check both your personal credit score (FICO) and your business credit score (if established). Personal scores drive most small business lending decisions. General ranges:
- 700+: Access to most products including SBA loans at competitive terms
- 650–699: Good options across working capital, equipment, and term loans
- 600–649: Options narrow; equipment and working capital products accessible
- 550–599: Specialized lenders available; rates will be higher
- Below 550: Very limited options; focus on revenue-based lenders
Time in Business
Most lenders require 6+ months of operating history. SBA loans typically require 2+ years. Some equipment lenders will work with businesses as new as 3 months with strong personal credit.
Monthly Revenue
Lenders typically require $10,000–$15,000+ in monthly gross revenue. Working capital amounts are often sized at 100–150% of average monthly revenue.
Bank Account Health
Lenders evaluate average daily balance, number of NSFs (non-sufficient funds events), and deposit consistency over the past 3–6 months. Clean bank statements significantly improve approval odds and rates.
Step 3: Gather Your Documentation
Documentation requirements vary by product and lender type. Have these ready:
For Fast Working Capital / Short-Term Loans (most common)
- 3–6 months of business bank statements
- Driver’s license or government ID
- Voided business check
- Basic business information (legal name, EIN, address)
For Equipment Financing
- Equipment quote or invoice from the dealer or seller
- 3–6 months bank statements
- Business formation documents (for larger amounts)
For SBA Loans and Larger Term Loans
- 2 years business tax returns
- 2 years personal tax returns
- Year-to-date profit and loss statement
- Balance sheet
- Business debt schedule
- Business plan or use-of-funds narrative
- Business licenses and formation documents
Tip: Incomplete documentation is the #1 cause of application delays. Preparing documents in advance — especially tax returns and bank statements — keeps your application moving once submitted.
Step 4: Choose the Right Lender Type
Not all lenders serve all borrowers. Understanding the lender landscape helps you target the right source:
- Traditional banks: Best rates and terms, but slowest process (weeks to months), highest credit and documentation requirements, and the lowest approval rates for small businesses.
- SBA-approved lenders: Government-backed programs with competitive rates and long terms — ideal for established businesses seeking $250,000+. Requires strong financials and time.
- Online / alternative lenders: Fast (same-day to 72-hour decisions), flexible qualification standards, higher rates — best for working capital, shorter-term needs, or businesses that don’t qualify for bank financing.
- Equipment lenders: Specialized lenders who finance the asset itself as collateral — more flexible credit requirements because the equipment secures the loan.
- Commercial finance brokers: Brokers (like Martimus Financial) match your profile to lenders across all categories — a single application reaches multiple lenders, and you’re guided to the best available offer.
Step 5: Submit Your Application
When applying through a broker or direct lender:
Step 6: Review and Compare Your Offer
When evaluating a business loan offer, look beyond the stated rate:
- Total cost of capital: What is the total dollar amount you’ll repay above the principal? For a $100,000 loan, is the total repayment $115,000 or $160,000?
- Payment structure: Daily ACH debits (common in MCAs and short-term loans) hit cash flow very differently than monthly payments. Confirm the payment schedule before signing.
- Prepayment terms: Can you pay off early to save on interest? Some products have fixed payback regardless of early payment (MCAs); others allow early payoff savings (term loans, LOCs).
- Collateral requirements: What are you pledging? A blanket UCC lien is common — understand what it covers and how it affects future borrowing.
- Origination fees and closing costs: Factor all fees into your total cost calculation, not just the stated rate.
Important: If an offer looks dramatically better than others you’ve received — unusually low rate, unusually high amount — slow down and verify the lender before proceeding. Legitimate lenders don’t rush approvals or pressure immediate signatures.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Check My Loan Options — Free →Martimus Financial Corporation is a commercial finance broker, not a direct lender. All financing subject to lender approval. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice or a commitment to lend.