If you’ve been told no by a bank because of your credit score, you’re not alone — and you’re not out of options. Nearly 40% of small business owners have personal credit scores below 650. Their businesses still need capital to make payroll, cover inventory, bridge slow seasons, and seize growth opportunities. The mistake most of these owners make is stopping at the bank’s “no” and assuming that’s the end of the road. It isn’t. Here’s what actually works.
Why Credit Score Matters Less Than You Think
The credit score threshold problem is a conventional lending problem. Banks and SBA lenders are underwriting you as a personal credit risk because they’re making long-term unsecured or partially-secured bets on your ability to repay. When your score is below 650, their risk models say no — regardless of how your business actually performs.
Revenue-based products flip this logic entirely. A merchant cash advance (MCA) or revenue-based line of credit is underwriting your business cash flow, not your personal credit history. The lender is asking: “Does this business have consistent, verifiable revenue that supports a repayment structure?” If the answer is yes, a 520 credit score is not necessarily a deal-breaker.
A concrete example: a restaurant doing $55,000 per month in credit card sales, open for 14 months, owner with a 530 credit score. Conventional bank? Declined. Revenue-based MCA? $40,000 in 48 hours at a 1.35 factor rate. The business had the cash flow to support it — the personal credit score was simply irrelevant to how the product was underwritten.
The Bad Credit Business Funding Stack
Here’s how I think about business funding options by credit tier in 2026. Each tier opens as your credit improves, but lower tiers remain available even as you qualify for better options:
Tier 1 — Any Credit (500+): Merchant Cash Advance
Factor rate: 1.20–1.50. Repayment via daily or weekly percentage of revenue. Funded in 24–72 hours. Best for businesses with consistent credit card or bank deposit volume. The cost is high but the access is broad.
Tier 2 — 550+ Credit: Revenue-Based Line of Credit
Draw and repay as needed. Better pricing than MCA on a per-dollar basis. Requires 6+ months in business and $15,000+/month in revenue. Some lenders work down to 540 with strong revenue history.
Tier 3 — 600+ Credit: Equipment Financing
Equipment is the collateral, so personal credit requirements drop. Rates: 8%–18% depending on equipment type and credit. Terms up to 60 months. If you need to acquire revenue-generating equipment, this is one of the most accessible structures at subprime credit.
Tier 4 — 620+ Credit: Business Line of Credit
Revolving, reusable. Rates: 15%–35% at this credit tier. Not cheap, but flexible. Ideal for managing cash flow swings rather than one-time capital needs.
Tier 5 — 680+ Credit: SBA Microloans and Community Lenders
SBA microloan program goes up to $50,000. Rates: 8%–13%. Terms up to 6 years. Requires 680+ personal credit, business plan, and more documentation. Slower process (4–8 weeks) but the cheapest long-term capital available at this credit range.
Real Numbers — MCA vs. LOC vs. SBA
You need $50,000. Here’s what the same capital need costs you across three different products:
| Product | Total Cost | Term | Min Credit |
|---|---|---|---|
| MCA (1.35 factor) | $67,500 total repayment ($17,500 cost) | 4–6 months | 500+ |
| Business LOC (22% APR) | ~$5,500 interest (12 months) | 12 months revolving | 620+ |
| SBA Microloan (9% APR) | ~$14,000 interest (84 months) | 84 months | 680+ |
The MCA looks expensive — and it is, on a cost-of-capital basis. But if you need capital in 48 hours, have a 530 credit score, and your business will generate enough revenue to repay it in 5 months, the MCA is the right tool. The SBA microloan has the cheapest total interest cost over its full term, but the 84-month payoff means you’re carrying that debt for 7 years. The business LOC is the sweet spot if you can qualify — relatively low cost, revolving access, immediate payoff once you don’t need it.
How to Improve Approval Odds Right Now
Even within the bad-credit product stack, lenders are distinguishing between strong and weak applications. Here’s what moves the needle:
Three months of clean bank statements. Revenue-based lenders look at your last 3 months of business bank deposits. Consistent, predictable deposits — even at modest amounts — are better than sporadic large deposits. If you’ve had a bad month or two, it may be worth waiting 60 days for the trailing data to improve.
Separate business account. Mixing business and personal transactions in one account is a red flag for every lender. If you’re still running your business through a personal account, open a dedicated business checking account immediately. It’s free at most banks and it materially improves how your application looks.
Eliminate NSFs. Non-sufficient funds (overdraft) entries in your bank statements are one of the biggest application killers. Lenders see NSFs as evidence of cash management problems. If you have NSFs in your last 3 months, address the underlying cash flow issue and wait until they age out of your most recent statements.
Time in business matters. Six months in business opens options that aren’t available at month three. Twelve months opens significantly more. If you’re approaching a milestone, sometimes waiting 30 days to cross it meaningfully expands your options.
Bad credit is a starting point, not a permanent ceiling. The business funding market in 2026 has more options for subprime borrowers than at any prior point — the key is matching the right product to your actual situation rather than trying to force a conventional loan where it doesn’t fit.
For business funding options, visit our Business Funding page to see current programs.
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