Revenue-Based Financing · 6 min read

Revenue-Based Financing vs. Term Loan: Which Is Right for Your Business?

Revenue-Based Financing

Business owners often struggle to choose between revenue-based financing (RBF) and a traditional term loan. Both provide lump sum capital — but the structure, cost, and best-use cases are quite different.

What Is Revenue-Based Financing?

Revenue-based financing (also called merchant cash advances or revenue loans) repays through a percentage of your daily or monthly revenue. As your revenue increases, you pay back faster. When revenue drops, payments shrink accordingly.

Key characteristics:

  • No fixed monthly payment — payments flex with your sales
  • Factor rate (e.g., 1.3–1.5) instead of interest rate
  • Funding in 24–72 hours for qualified businesses
  • Typically $10K – $2M
  • No personal collateral required in most cases

What Is a Term Loan?

A traditional term loan gives you a fixed lump sum upfront, which you repay over a set period (typically 1–7 years) at a fixed or variable interest rate.

Key characteristics:

  • Fixed monthly payment regardless of revenue fluctuations
  • Interest rate (APR) typically 6–36% depending on creditworthiness
  • Approval takes 2–6 weeks for traditional bank loans
  • Typically $25K – $5M
  • Often requires collateral or personal guarantees

Head-to-Head Comparison

FactorRevenue-Based FinancingTerm Loan
Payment Structure% of daily/monthly revenueFixed monthly amount
Cost MetricFactor rate (1.3–1.5)APR (6–36%)
Funding Speed24–72 hours2–6 weeks
Collateral RequiredUsually noOften yes
Best Revenue Requirement$5K+/month minimum$50K+/year typically
Early RepaymentNo penalty (fixed payout)May have prepayment penalties
Credit Score ImpactLess stringentMore stringent

When Revenue-Based Financing Wins

  • Seasonal businesses — Payments drop in slow months, preventing cash flow strain
  • Fast-growing companies — Pay off quickly as revenue increases, no long-term debt
  • Short-term needs — Inventory purchases, marketing campaigns, one-time opportunities
  • Less-than-perfect credit — RBF focuses more on revenue than credit scores
  • Startup phase — New businesses with limited credit history can qualify based on revenue

When a Term Loan Wins

  • Large capital expenditures — Real estate, major equipment, acquisitions ($250K+)
  • Long-term projects — Infrastructure, expansion, multi-year growth plans
  • Lower cost priority — Term loans typically have lower effective cost (APR) than RBF
  • Predictable budgeting — Fixed payments make forecasting easier
  • Building business credit — Term loan payments reported to business credit bureaus

Example: Which Saves More Money?

Let's say you borrow $100,000:

Revenue-Based Financing: Factor rate of 1.4 means you repay $140,000 total. If you generate $500K/year in revenue and pay back 15% monthly, you're done in about 5–6 months if revenue is strong.

Term Loan: 10% APR over 3 years means total repayment of ~$116,000. Lower cost — but requires consistent monthly payments of ~$3,222 regardless of revenue.

If your revenue is volatile or growing fast, RBF often delivers better outcomes. If you want the lowest cost and have stable revenue, a term loan is typically better.

How GrowthX Capital Can Help

We offer both revenue-based financing and small business term loans. Our specialists analyze your business model, revenue patterns, and goals to recommend the right product — not just the one with the highest margin for us.

Get a free quote and see both options side-by-side. No commitment, 24-hour turnaround.