How Much Can I Borrow for My Business?

Your borrowing power comes down to revenue, time in business, credit, and the loan type. Here's the rule of thumb lenders use, typical ranges by product, and how to qualify for more.

  • The revenue rule of thumb lenders use
  • Typical amount ranges by loan type
  • What pushes your number up—or down
  • One application, multiple lenders

Quick Answer: How Much Can You Borrow?

For most short-term financing, the working rule of thumb is 10% to 30% of your annual revenue—roughly one to two months of sales. So a business doing $1,000,000 a year might see offers around $100,000-$300,000. Structured products go higher: SBA 7(a) reaches $5 million, and commercial real estate loans can exceed that. Your exact number depends on five things: revenue, time in business, credit, existing debt, and the loan type.

  • Short-term rule of thumb: ~10-30% of annual revenue
  • SBA 7(a) ceiling: up to $5 million
  • Biggest lever: consistent, documented revenue
  • Estimate payments: use our business loan calculator

The 5 Factors That Set Your Amount

1. Revenue

The single biggest driver. Higher, steadier monthly and annual revenue supports a bigger loan.

2. Time in Business

More operating history lowers lender risk and raises your ceiling. New businesses see smaller offers.

3. Credit Profile

Stronger credit unlocks larger amounts, lower rates, and longer terms—especially for bank and SBA loans.

4. Existing Debt

Current loans and their daily/weekly payments reduce how much new debt your cash flow can carry.

5. Loan Type

Each product has its own ceiling—an advance caps lower than an SBA loan or a real estate loan.

How lenders frame it: they size the loan so the payment fits comfortably within your cash flow—often measured by a debt-service coverage ratio. If the payment would strain you, they offer less.

Typical Borrowing Ranges by Loan Type

Each product has its own typical floor and ceiling. Match the amount you need to the right type:

Loan typeTypical rangeAmount driven mainly by
Merchant cash advance$5K-$250KMonthly card/sales volume
Working capital loan$10K-$500KMonthly revenue & deposits
Revenue-based financing$10K-$500KAnnual revenue
Business line of credit$10K-$500KRevenue & credit
Business term loan$25K-$1MRevenue, credit, time in business
Equipment financingUp to equipment valueThe equipment cost
SBA 7(a) loanUp to $5MFinancials, collateral, cash flow
Commercial real estate$100K-$5M+Property value & income

Looking for a specific figure? See our amount guides: $50K, $100K, $250K, $500K, $1M.

Estimate Your Borrowing Power (Revenue Rule of Thumb)

For short-term and revenue-based financing, you can ballpark your range from annual revenue. These are illustrative estimates, not offers—actual amounts depend on the full picture:

Annual revenueApprox. short-term range (10-30%)
$250,000~$25,000 - $75,000
$500,000~$50,000 - $150,000
$1,000,000~$100,000 - $300,000
$2,500,000~$250,000 - $500,000+

For larger, structured needs (acquisition, real estate, major expansion), SBA and bank loans look at full financials and collateral rather than a simple revenue percentage—and can go far higher.

Estimate Your Payment

Once you have a target amount, use the calculator to see the monthly payment at different rates and terms (fill in at least three of the four fields). Estimates only—apply for real offers.

How to Qualify for a Larger Loan

Want a bigger number? These moves raise your ceiling over time:

Grow & Document Revenue

Consistent, rising deposits are the fastest way to a larger offer.

Build Time in Business

Crossing 1 and 2 years opens larger programs and better terms.

Improve Credit

Higher scores unlock bank and SBA amounts that revenue alone can't.

Reduce Existing Debt

Lower current payments free up cash flow to support a bigger new loan.

Add Collateral

For the largest amounts, pledged assets push the ceiling up significantly.

Pick the Right Product

Match the loan type to the purpose—an SBA loan or term loan reaches far higher than an advance.

How Much Can I Borrow? FAQs

How much can I borrow for my business?

Most businesses can borrow an amount tied to revenue—commonly 10-30% of annual revenue for short-term financing. SBA and bank loans can go well beyond with strong financials and collateral. Your amount depends on revenue, time in business, credit, existing debt, and loan type.

How do lenders decide how much to lend?

They weigh revenue, time in business, credit, existing debt and its payments, cash flow consistency, and collateral—sizing the loan so the payment fits comfortably within your cash flow.

How much can I get based on revenue?

For revenue-based and short-term products, offers commonly land around 10-30% of annual revenue (roughly one to two months of sales). Higher revenue and stronger credit push toward the upper end.

How can I qualify for a larger loan?

Grow and document revenue, build time in business, improve credit, reduce existing debt, keep clean bank statements, and add collateral for the largest amounts.

What is the maximum business loan amount?

It depends on the program—short-term and revenue-based products commonly reach $250K-$500K, SBA 7(a) goes up to $5M, and commercial real estate and large term loans can exceed that.

Related Tools & Amount Guides

Find Out Exactly How Much You Qualify For

A rule of thumb only gets you so far. Submit one application and we'll match you with lenders and show you real amounts based on your revenue, credit, and goals—no guesswork.