Medical practices are among the most creditworthy small businesses in the lending market — yet many physicians and healthcare providers struggle to access the capital they need because they do not know which financing products exist or how to qualify for them. Whether you are opening a new practice, acquiring an established one, purchasing advanced diagnostic equipment, or managing the persistent working capital challenge of insurance reimbursement cycles, this guide covers every financing option available to medical practice owners.
In This Article
Medical practices have several characteristics that create both favorable lending conditions and specific capital needs:
Healthcare Lending Specialization: Many major banks and lending platforms have specific healthcare divisions that understand medical practice economics — including reimbursement cycles, payer mix, relative value units (RVUs), and the specific equipment capital requirements of different specialties. Working with healthcare-specialized lenders typically produces better terms than working with generalist business lenders who may not fully understand the medical practice business model.
Opening a new medical practice requires planning for three distinct capital categories:
The most underestimated startup cost is the pre-revenue working capital need. Insurance credentialing takes 3 to 6 months. Even after credentialing, reimbursements take 30 to 90 days to arrive. Plan for 6 to 12 months of full operating expense coverage before consistent cash flow begins. A practice with $40,000/month in operating costs needs $240,000 to $480,000 in startup working capital.
Acquiring an existing practice — purchasing the patient panel, goodwill, equipment, and operations from a retiring or exiting physician — is often the fastest path to a productive medical business. Key acquisition financing options:
SBA 7(a) loans are the most commonly used product for medical practice acquisitions. They can fund the purchase price, working capital, and equipment upgrades in a single facility at competitive rates. The existing practice's revenue history provides the income documentation needed for underwriting.
Traditional banks with healthcare lending specialization often offer practice acquisition loans with competitive rates for physicians with strong credit and the ability to service the debt from the acquired practice's revenue.
Many practice acquisitions include a seller financing component — the retiring physician carries a note for 20%–40% of the purchase price, with the buyer making payments over 3 to 10 years. This reduces the amount of external financing needed and aligns the seller's interest in a smooth transition.
Medical equipment is specialized, expensive, and often qualifies for favorable financing terms because of its specific utility and residual value:
| Equipment Category | Typical Cost Range | Common Financing Term |
|---|---|---|
| EHR/Practice Management System | $15,000–$100,000 | 36–60 months |
| Digital X-ray System | $30,000–$150,000 | 36–84 months |
| Ultrasound Machine | $20,000–$100,000 | 36–60 months |
| CT Scanner | $200,000–$2,500,000 | 60–120 months |
| MRI Machine | $500,000–$3,000,000 | 84–120 months |
| Surgical Robotic System | $500,000–$2,500,000 | 60–120 months |
| Aesthetic Laser System | $50,000–$350,000 | 36–60 months |
For a comprehensive overview of equipment financing mechanics, see our Equipment Financing 101: How It Works and Who Should Use It.
Working capital is the most persistent operational financing need for medical practices, driven by the structural mismatch between service delivery and payment receipt:
Services are delivered daily. Claims are submitted weekly or monthly. Insurance reimbursements arrive 30 to 90 days after claims. Staff payroll continues biweekly. Rent, supplies, and overhead continue monthly. For a practice with $200,000/month in gross charges, there may be $150,000 to $400,000 in receivables outstanding at any time. Working capital ensures operations continue smoothly while waiting for collection.
Medical receivables financing (sometimes called medical factoring) converts outstanding insurance claims to immediate cash:
Medical receivables financing is most valuable for practices with: high Medicare/Medicaid volume (longer reimbursement cycles); practices experiencing rapid growth that outpaces cash flow; practices managing large credentialing backlogs; and any practice where the receivables-to-revenue ratio is creating operating cash flow stress.
SBA loans are particularly well-suited for medical practice financing:
SBA 7(a) loans up to $5 million can fund practice startup, acquisition, expansion, equipment packages, and working capital. Healthcare is one of SBA's most actively supported business categories. Established practices with 2+ years of history and 680+ personal credit access SBA financing at rates of 9%–13.5% — significantly below alternative lender rates for comparable amounts.
For medical practice financing needs under $500,000 with some urgency, SBA Express (36-hour SBA response) provides SBA-backed rates on a faster timeline. For more on SBA Express, see our SBA Express Loans: The Complete Guide to Fast SBA Funding.
For practices purchasing their building, expanding into a new facility, or acquiring major imaging equipment, SBA 504 loans provide fixed-rate long-term financing at the lowest available rates for large fixed asset purchases.
Medical Practice Financing You Can Build On
Crestmont Capital works with physicians and healthcare providers across specialties — equipment, working capital, practice acquisition, and SBA financing.
Apply Now →Crestmont Capital works with medical practices across specialties — from primary care to subspecialties, from solo practices to group practices. We understand the unique financial dynamics of healthcare and can structure financing that fits your practice's specific cash flow cycle and capital needs.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. Medical practice financing eligibility and terms vary by lender, specialty, and individual financial profile. Consult a qualified financial advisor and healthcare practice consultant before making financing decisions.