If you run a dealership or inventory-heavy business, you already know the challenge: your products cost tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars each, yet they may sit on your lot for weeks or months before a buyer shows up. Floor plan financing was built specifically to solve that problem. It gives dealers and inventory-based businesses the capital to stock their shelves, lots, and showrooms without draining working capital or tying up assets. This guide explains everything you need to know about floor plan loans, how they work, who qualifies, what rates look like, and how to find the right lender for your situation.
In This ArticleFloor plan financing is a short-term revolving credit facility that allows businesses to purchase inventory - typically high-value, individual units such as vehicles, equipment, boats, RVs, or heavy machinery - and pay for each item over time as it sells. The lender pays the manufacturer or wholesaler directly for each unit, and the dealer repays the lender once the unit is sold to an end customer. This arrangement is sometimes called a floor plan loan, dealer floor plan financing, or inventory floor plan financing.
The term "floor plan" originates from the literal floor of a showroom or dealership, where each vehicle or piece of inventory occupies physical space. The lender essentially "owns" the inventory on the floor until the dealer sells it and repays the advance. From a structural standpoint, floor plan financing sits somewhere between a secured revolving line of credit and an asset-backed loan, using the inventory itself as collateral.
Unlike traditional business loans that deposit a lump sum into your bank account, floor plan lending is transactional. Each time you acquire a new unit, the lender funds that specific purchase. When the unit sells, you "curtail" - meaning you pay down the floor plan balance for that unit. The credit then becomes available again for the next purchase, making it a self-renewing facility aligned with your inventory cycle.
According to the Small Business Administration, managing working capital is one of the top operational challenges for small and mid-size businesses. Floor plan financing addresses this directly by converting your inventory acquisition costs into a manageable, pay-as-you-sell obligation rather than an immediate cash outlay.
The mechanics of a floor plan loan follow a straightforward cycle, though the details vary by lender and industry. Here is the typical process from start to finish:
The dealer or business owner applies for a floor plan line of credit with a lender. The lender evaluates creditworthiness, business history, inventory type, and sales data to determine a credit limit - often ranging from $100,000 to several million dollars depending on the scale of the operation.
When the dealer identifies inventory to purchase - say, a batch of used cars from an auction, a new excavator from a manufacturer, or a line of boats from a distributor - they submit a funding request to the floor plan lender. The lender verifies the purchase, confirms title or ownership, and wires payment directly to the seller. The dealer does not need to use personal funds or business checking to acquire the unit.
Once funded, the unit is considered "on the floor plan." The lender holds a security interest in the title until the dealer repays the advance. The dealer takes possession of the unit and places it in their showroom, lot, or service bay for sale.
While the unit sits in inventory, the dealer pays interest - and sometimes small monthly curtailment payments - on the outstanding balance for that unit. Interest accrues daily or monthly depending on the loan agreement. The longer a unit sits unsold, the more it costs to hold. This creates a powerful incentive for dealers to move inventory quickly.
When a customer purchases the unit, the dealer uses the sale proceeds to repay the lender's advance on that specific unit. After repayment, that portion of the credit line is freed up and becomes available for the next purchase. This revolving structure is what makes floor plan lending so efficient for high-volume dealers.
Most floor plan agreements include curtailment schedules that require dealers to pay down a percentage of each unit's original advance - often 10% to 20% - after a set number of days (commonly 30 to 90 days). These curtailment requirements prevent dealers from holding aged inventory indefinitely on the lender's dime. If a unit sits too long without selling, curtailment payments increase and the cost of carry rises sharply.
Crestmont Capital offers flexible floor plan and inventory financing solutions tailored to dealers and inventory-heavy businesses nationwide.
Apply Now - Fast DecisionsFloor plan financing is commonly associated with automobile dealerships, but its application extends across many industries where high-value inventory is the core business asset. Here is a breakdown of the primary users:
New and used car, truck, and SUV dealers are the most well-known users of auto dealer floor plans. Whether the dealer is a franchise operation carrying new vehicles from a manufacturer or an independent used-car lot, floor plan lending provides the capital backbone for maintaining a robust vehicle inventory. Large franchise dealers may carry floor plan lines in the tens of millions of dollars. Bloomberg has reported that rising interest rates significantly impact dealer profitability precisely because floor plan costs fluctuate with the rate environment.
Recreational vehicle and marine dealers face even more capital-intensive inventory challenges because RVs and boats carry higher individual unit prices and longer sales cycles than automobiles. A single Class A motorhome may cost $150,000 to $500,000. Without floor plan financing, small to mid-size RV dealers could not afford to maintain a broad selection of models on their lot.
Motorcycle, ATV, jet ski, and snowmobile dealers rely heavily on floor plan lines to fund seasonal inventory spikes. Buying inventory ahead of spring or summer demand requires capital that most dealers cannot self-fund.
Construction equipment, agricultural machinery, and industrial tool dealers use floor plan financing to carry expensive heavy equipment - items like bulldozers, skid steers, and excavators that may each cost $100,000 or more. For more on how equipment financing works in parallel with floor plan lending, see our guide on equipment financing.
Dealers who sell modular and manufactured homes use floor plan-style financing to fund model home inventory and display units that customers inspect before ordering.
High-end watch retailers, fine art dealers, and luxury goods businesses sometimes use inventory financing arrangements similar in structure to floor plans to fund premium display inventory.
Floor plan financing delivers a unique set of advantages that general-purpose business loans simply cannot match for inventory-driven businesses:
Instead of tying up six or seven figures in purchased inventory, you deploy that capital toward payroll, marketing, facility improvements, or other operational needs. Floor plan financing essentially converts a large upfront capital requirement into a manageable ongoing cost of business.
Customers buy from dealers who have what they want in stock. With a robust floor plan line of credit, you can maintain a broader selection of models, trims, and configurations - which directly increases your close rate and revenue per location.
Unlike a term loan with fixed monthly payments, floor plan lending aligns your repayment obligations with your actual sales activity. When you sell more, you pay down more and open up credit. When sales slow, your balance naturally decreases as inventory shrinks.
Many floor plan lenders have established relationships with vehicle auctions, OEM manufacturers, and wholesale distributors. This can streamline purchase approvals and funding timelines, allowing dealers to act quickly when a strong buying opportunity appears.
Successfully managing a floor plan line over time demonstrates creditworthiness to future lenders, making it easier to access small business loans, equipment lines, or expansion capital down the road.
Many floor plan structures charge interest only - or interest plus small curtailments - while inventory is unsold. This means your monthly cash obligation for a unit is far lower than a traditional installment loan would require, preserving cash flow.
Business owners evaluating floor plan financing often compare it against general business lines of credit and term loans. Each product has distinct characteristics, and understanding the differences helps you choose the right tool for each situation. For businesses that need both inventory funding and operational flexibility, see our overview of business lines of credit for a deeper comparison.
| Feature | Floor Plan Financing | Business Line of Credit | Term Loan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best For | Dealers buying high-value units | Operational cash flow gaps | One-time capital purchase |
| Collateral | Inventory (units on floor plan) | None (unsecured) or mixed | Equipment, real estate, or none |
| Repayment | Per-unit, upon sale | Minimum monthly payments | Fixed monthly installments |
| Credit Limit | $100K - $50M+ | $10K - $500K typical | $25K - $5M+ |
| Interest Rate | Prime + 2% to 8% | 8% - 25% APR | 6% - 30% depending on risk |
| Revolving? | Yes - per unit | Yes | No |
| Use of Funds | Inventory purchase only | Any business purpose | Specific purpose or general |
| Approval Speed | 1 to 5 business days | 1 to 14 business days | 3 to 30+ business days |
As the comparison grid illustrates, floor plan financing is purpose-built for inventory acquisition and does not compete directly with lines of credit or term loans for general operational expenses. Savvy dealers often carry a floor plan line for inventory alongside a separate business line of credit for operational needs - creating a complementary two-layer financing stack.
For businesses whose primary need is financing depreciating assets rather than revolving inventory, see our equipment leasing options, which may offer favorable off-balance-sheet treatment compared to floor plan debt.
Qualification criteria for floor plan loans differ from those of traditional business loans because lenders evaluate both the borrower and the quality of the inventory that will serve as collateral. Here is what most floor plan lenders look for:
Most floor plan lenders require at least 1 to 2 years of operating history as a licensed dealer or inventory-based business. Startups without a sales history can access some programs but typically face lower credit limits and more restrictive terms until they build a track record with the lender.
While floor plan financing is asset-backed, credit scores still matter. Most lenders look for a personal FICO score of 620 or higher and a clean business credit profile. Higher scores unlock better rates and higher credit limits. Some specialized floor plan lenders work with borrowers in the 580-620 range, especially if sales volume and inventory quality are strong.
For vehicle dealers, a valid state dealer license is a non-negotiable requirement. Lenders verify that the dealer is legally authorized to purchase and resell the type of inventory they intend to floor plan. Equipment dealers may need to demonstrate manufacturer authorization or industry membership.
Lenders typically request 2 to 3 years of business tax returns plus recent business bank statements (3 to 12 months). They analyze revenue trends, gross profit margins on sales, and the relationship between inventory costs and revenue to assess cash flow sustainability.
Many floor plan lenders conduct physical lot audits - either initially or on a periodic basis - to verify that floored units actually exist at the dealership and are accounted for. "Out of trust" situations (selling a unit without paying down its floor plan balance) are serious defaults that lenders monitor for aggressively.
Floor plan lenders generally expect to see annual revenues of at least $250,000 to $500,000 for smaller programs. High-volume operators with multi-million-dollar annual sales can access much larger credit facilities.
Crestmont Capital works with dealers at every stage. Our specialists can review your situation and match you with the right inventory financing program - even if you have been turned down elsewhere.
Check Your Options NowFloor plan financing rates and terms vary considerably depending on the lender type, the borrower's credit profile, the type of inventory, and macroeconomic interest rate conditions. Here is a comprehensive breakdown of what to expect when shopping for floor plan lending:
Most floor plan loans are priced as a spread over a benchmark rate, typically the prime rate or the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR). A dealer might receive terms of "Prime + 3.5%" - meaning if the prime rate is 8.5%, their effective floor plan rate is 12%. As CNBC reported, rising Federal Reserve rates directly squeeze dealer margins through higher floor plan carrying costs.
Beyond the headline interest rate, floor plan agreements often include several fees that impact total cost of financing:
Floor plan credit limits are generally set based on a multiple of monthly sales volume, the average unit cost of inventory, and the lender's assessment of risk. Common ranges are:
Unlike term loans with multi-year repayment schedules, individual units on a floor plan are typically expected to sell within 90 to 180 days. The overall floor plan line itself may renew annually. Aged inventory beyond 180 days often triggers higher curtailment requirements or mandatory payoff demands.
Floor plan lenders rarely advance 100% of a unit's purchase cost. Common advance rates are:
The difference between the purchase price and the advance amount is your "equity in the unit" - the portion you fund from your own capital, functioning as a down payment.
Applying for floor plan financing is more structured than applying for a general business loan because lenders need to evaluate both your business and your inventory management systems. Here is what a typical application process looks like:
Before reaching out to lenders, prepare the following documents:
There are several categories of floor plan lenders, each with different strengths:
For businesses evaluating whether inventory financing or a floor plan line is the better fit, our inventory financing guide provides a detailed side-by-side analysis. You might also want to read our complete guide to inventory financing for broader context.
Most floor plan applications take 3 to 10 business days to underwrite. The lender will pull credit, verify business documents, and potentially schedule a lot visit or phone interview with ownership. Some alternative lenders can approve and fund within 24 to 48 hours, particularly for smaller credit lines.
The floor plan agreement is a comprehensive legal document. Pay close attention to: curtailment schedules and timelines, out-of-trust provisions and penalties, audit rights and frequency, rate adjustment triggers, and conditions for line increase or reduction.
Once approved, you can begin submitting funding requests for individual inventory purchases. The process is typically completed online through a lender portal - you submit unit details (VIN, invoice, title), the lender verifies and funds directly to the seller.
A business owner reviewing floor plan financing terms with a commercial lending advisor.
Crestmont Capital is one of the nation's leading alternative commercial lenders, with a track record of helping dealers, distributors, and inventory-based businesses access the capital they need to grow. Our inventory financing and floor plan programs are designed for business owners who need fast, flexible access to credit - without the bureaucratic delays and rigid criteria of traditional bank lending.
Beyond floor plan lending, Crestmont Capital offers a full suite of financing products that dealers and business owners commonly use alongside their floor plan lines, including short-term business loans for urgent cash flow needs and equipment financing for shop equipment, lifts, and facilities upgrades. Our guide to how equipment financing works is a useful resource for dealers planning facility expansions.
Forbes and other leading financial publications have highlighted how alternative lenders are filling critical funding gaps for small and mid-size businesses that traditional banks underserve. Crestmont Capital was built on that mission - to deliver institutional-quality capital with the speed and flexibility that growing businesses actually need.
Abstract concepts become clearer with concrete examples. Here are six real-world scenarios illustrating how floor plan financing works in practice across different industries and business sizes:
Maria owns a 50-car independent used-vehicle dealership in suburban Texas. Before securing a floor plan line, she could only buy inventory when she had cash available, which limited her lot to 20 to 25 vehicles at most. With a $400,000 floor plan line, she now buys at auction weekly, maintains a 50-unit lot, and has seen her monthly unit sales double. The interest she pays to hold inventory is more than offset by the increased revenue from higher inventory turnover.
Tom operates an RV dealership in the Pacific Northwest. He sees 60% of his annual sales occur between March and August. Using a $2.5 million floor plan line, he purchases a full roster of Class A, B, and C motorhomes in January and February - before peak demand - and capitalizes on the seasonal buying surge. By July, his lot is largely sold out and his floor plan balance is nearly zero, setting him up to repeat the cycle.
Carlos runs a construction equipment dealership that specializes in compact equipment. He lands a new dealer agreement with a leading mini-excavator manufacturer. His floor plan lender increases his credit line by $1.5 million to accommodate the new product line, allowing him to take delivery of 12 excavators for display and immediate sale. Within 90 days, he sells eight of the twelve units and repays those advances, with the credit now available for his next order.
A franchise Toyota dealer with a $15 million floor plan line reviews monthly data and finds that slow-moving vehicle trims are aging past 90 days and triggering higher curtailment requirements. The general manager implements an aggressive pricing strategy on aged inventory and reallocates those floor plan proceeds to faster-moving models. Over two quarters, average inventory age drops from 68 days to 44 days - meaningfully reducing total floor plan carrying costs.
Dana's boat dealership in Florida has operated successfully for six years. She wants to open a second location 40 miles away to capture a new market. Her existing floor plan lender extends her line from $1.8 million to $3.5 million to cover inventory at both locations, with separate inventory audits for each site. The second location opens with 20 units on display and becomes profitable within 18 months.
James is a former auction buyer who decides to open his own used-car dealership. With a 2-year dealer license and solid personal credit (680 FICO), he applies with an alternative lender and receives a $150,000 floor plan line. He starts with 12 vehicles, builds his sales track record over 12 months, and qualifies for a line increase to $300,000 - all while maintaining an average inventory age under 45 days. This strategy of starting small, performing well, and growing the line is the classic path for new dealer entrants.
Floor plan financing is the engine that powers the dealership industry. Without it, most dealers could not maintain the breadth of inventory selection that today's customers expect - and the result would be lower sales, missed opportunities, and stunted growth. Whether you operate an auto dealership, an RV lot, a marine center, or an equipment dealership, understanding how floor plan loans work, what they cost, and how to qualify puts you in control of your growth trajectory.
The key takeaways from this guide: floor plan financing is inventory-secured and revolving, with repayment tied to individual unit sales rather than fixed installments. Rates are competitive for well-qualified dealers, and the market includes multiple lender types serving businesses at every credit tier. Managing your inventory age and maintaining trust status are the two most critical operational disciplines for any floor plan borrower.
If you are ready to explore floor plan or inventory financing for your business, Crestmont Capital is here to help. Our team of commercial financing specialists understands the dealer world and can structure a program that fits your inventory model, sales cycle, and growth goals.
Crestmont Capital offers fast approvals, high advance rates, and flexible programs for dealers and inventory businesses nationwide. Complete our quick application and get a decision in as little as 24 hours.
Apply Now - No Obligation