Construction Business Loans & Equipment Financing
Equipment financing, working capital, and term loans for contractors, subcontractors, and construction companies — fast approval, flexible qualification, and lenders who understand how construction cash flow actually works.
Check Construction Loan Eligibility — Free →Construction is one of the few industries where winning more work can create a cash flow crisis. A contractor who lands a $1.5 million commercial project needs to mobilize equipment, hire labor, and purchase materials 60–90 days before the general contractor cuts the first progress payment. That upfront capital gap — between job mobilization and first payment — is one of the defining financial challenges of the construction business.
Add equipment costs, subcontractor payroll, bonding requirements, seasonal slowdowns, and retainage withheld until project completion, and you have an industry that requires consistent access to capital at multiple points throughout the project lifecycle. Martimus Financial works with general contractors, specialty subcontractors, home builders, excavators, roofers, HVAC contractors, electricians, plumbers, and construction management firms across the U.S.
Why Construction Companies Face Unique Financing Challenges
- Front-Loaded Capital Requirements: Equipment mobilization, material procurement, and labor costs front-load the project well before progress payments arrive. Contractors routinely absorb 30–60 days of working capital per job before billing.
- Retainage Holdbacks: GCs typically withhold 5–10% of contract value until final project completion — capital that's earned but inaccessible for months or years on large projects.
- Seasonal Revenue Patterns: Northern markets see sharp winter slowdowns. Southern markets may slow in extreme summer heat. Revenue concentrations in spring and fall can mislead lenders unfamiliar with construction seasonality.
- Equipment as Liability: Heavy equipment is expensive, depreciates, requires maintenance, and may sit unused between projects — but it's essential to win and complete contracts. The right equipment financing structure can turn this capital burden into an asset.
- Bonding and Insurance: Bid bonds, performance bonds, and payment bonds require strong financials and available credit — capital access and creditworthiness directly affect your ability to bid on public and commercial projects.
Funding Programs for Construction Businesses
Who Qualifies for Construction Business Loans?
Construction-experienced lenders understand that revenue concentrations — large draws from progress payments — look different on a bank statement than steady monthly deposits. They evaluate overall revenue volume, contract backlog, equipment value, and the owner's construction experience alongside standard credit criteria. A subcontractor with irregular but large monthly deposits often qualifies for more capital than their average monthly figures suggest.
Common Use Cases — Construction Financing
- Buy equipment to win a contract: Mobilize the right equipment to bid on and win projects you currently can't pursue.
- Bridge a retainage holdback: Access capital tied up in retainage so you can start new projects without waiting on project closeout.
- Cover material costs before first draw: Finance lumber, steel, concrete, or specialty materials upfront on a new project.
- Payroll during winter slowdown: Retain key employees during seasonal gaps rather than losing experienced crew.
- Fleet expansion: Add work trucks, vans, or trailers to support more job sites simultaneously.
- Buy your shop or yard: Own the property your business operates from — eliminate lease risk and build equity.
Frequently Asked Questions
Get Construction Business Financing
Apply free in 2 minutes. No credit impact. Equipment and working capital same-day approval available.
Apply Now — Free →Or call (919) 457-5200 to speak with a construction financing advisor
Martimus Financial Corporation is a commercial finance broker, not a direct lender. All financing subject to lender approval, underwriting, and credit review. This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a commitment to lend.