Running a marine construction business means tackling some of the most demanding projects in the contracting world. Whether you build docks and piers, construct seawalls, install boat lifts, or manage large-scale waterfront infrastructure projects, your work requires specialized equipment, skilled labor, and substantial upfront capital. Yet many marine contractors struggle to find lenders who understand the seasonal cash flow patterns, the unique collateral challenges, and the project-based revenue cycle that define this industry. This guide breaks down every financing option available for marine contractors, explains how to qualify, and shows you how to use capital strategically to grow your business.
Marine construction is a broad and growing sector that encompasses everything from residential dock installation to commercial marina development and critical waterfront infrastructure. According to data from the U.S. Census Bureau, waterfront construction activity has increased significantly over the past decade as both residential and commercial demand for waterfront amenities continues to climb. The market includes thousands of specialized contractors across coastal states, the Great Lakes region, and interior waterways.
Marine contractors operate in a fundamentally different environment from general contractors. Jobs take place on or near the water, which creates unique logistical challenges. Equipment must be either water-capable or transported to marine environments. Projects are often seasonal or weather-dependent, compressing revenue into specific windows of the year. Large projects can require six-figure mobilization costs before a single invoice is submitted.
The capital requirements for marine construction businesses include:
The combination of high upfront costs and delayed payment cycles makes access to capital a strategic necessity rather than a luxury for any marine contractor looking to scale.
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Apply Now - Get Funded FastMarine contractors have access to a wider range of financing tools than many realize. The right product depends on what you need the money for, how quickly you need it, and the financial profile of your business. Here is a breakdown of the primary financing options:
Term loans provide a lump sum of capital repaid over a fixed period, typically 1-10 years. They work well for large, one-time purchases like equipment, business acquisitions, or facility investments. Small business loans from alternative lenders can fund anywhere from $10,000 to $5 million, with terms and rates that reflect the health of your business rather than requiring the perfect credit profile that banks demand.
This is often the most important financing tool for marine contractors. Equipment loans or leases use the machinery itself as collateral, which makes them easier to qualify for and often carries better rates than unsecured products. We cover this in depth in the section below.
A revolving line of credit gives you access to a pool of capital you can draw on as needed, repay, and draw again. It is ideal for managing the day-to-day cash flow gaps that come with project-based work. A business line of credit lets you cover payroll, materials, and operating costs without committing to a large term loan when you may only need short-term liquidity.
The U.S. Small Business Administration guarantees loans made by approved lenders, reducing the risk for banks and opening doors for contractors who might not otherwise qualify for traditional financing. SBA loans offer lower rates and longer terms, but require more documentation and take longer to close. We cover SBA options in detail below.
When you need capital quickly to mobilize for a job, cover an unexpected equipment repair, or bridge a payment gap, short-term business loans can fund in as little as 24-48 hours. These loans carry higher rates given their speed and accessibility, but used strategically they can be highly cost-effective compared to losing a contract or missing payroll.
For significant investments with long payback periods, such as purchasing a barge, acquiring a competitor, or building a fabrication facility, long-term business loans spread repayments over multiple years, making large capital outlays manageable within your cash flow.
Working capital loans are specifically designed to fund the operating cycle of your business rather than asset purchases. They are ideal for covering the gap between project start costs and first payment receipt, keeping your business operational between large contracts.
No other financing product is more relevant to a marine contractor's daily operations than equipment financing. The machinery required for marine construction is expensive, highly specialized, and depreciates in ways that differ from standard contractor equipment. Understanding how to finance this equipment intelligently can be the difference between growing your capacity and being perpetually limited by what you already own.
Virtually any piece of equipment used in your business can be financed through equipment financing, including:
Equipment loans let you purchase the equipment outright, with the asset serving as collateral. You own the equipment at the end of the loan term. Leases, by contrast, allow you to use equipment for a defined period and return or purchase it at term end. Leases typically require lower monthly payments and may have tax advantages, while loans build equity in the asset. For marine equipment with strong resale value, loans often make more sense. For technology-heavy equipment that quickly becomes obsolete, leases may be preferable.
Section 179 of the U.S. tax code allows businesses to deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment in the year of purchase rather than depreciating it over time. For 2024, the Section 179 deduction limit was $1,160,000. Marine contractors who purchase equipment with financing can often deduct the full amount even if they financed the purchase, creating meaningful tax benefits. Consult a tax professional for advice specific to your situation.
The U.S. Small Business Administration offers several loan programs that are well-suited to marine construction businesses, particularly those looking for larger amounts or longer repayment terms at competitive rates.
The SBA 7(a) is the most popular and flexible SBA loan program. Marine contractors can use these funds for working capital, equipment purchases, business acquisition, or real estate. Loan amounts go up to $5 million, with terms up to 10 years for working capital and 25 years for real estate. Interest rates are capped by the SBA and are generally lower than alternative lender products.
For marine contractors, SBA 7(a) loans are particularly useful for:
SBA 504 loans are designed specifically for major fixed assets like real estate or large equipment. They typically involve three parties: the borrower contributes 10%, a Certified Development Company (CDC) provides 40% via an SBA-backed debenture, and a bank covers the remaining 50%. For marine contractors looking to purchase a boatyard, dock facility, or large piece of marine infrastructure, the 504 program can offer below-market long-term fixed rates.
SBA loans require more documentation than alternative lending products, including 2-3 years of business tax returns, personal tax returns, a business plan or financial projections, and personal financial statements. Approval can take 30-90 days. If you need capital quickly, an alternative lender like Crestmont Capital can provide faster access while you work on an SBA application in parallel.
Equipment Financing
SBA 504
Term Loan
Line of Credit
Working Capital Loan
Short-Term Loan
SBA 7(a)
Long-Term Loan
Term Loan
Short-Term Loan
Line of Credit
Working Capital
Crestmont Capital offers all of these products. Apply once and see all your options.
Cash flow management is perhaps the single biggest financial challenge for marine construction companies. Projects are won, started, and completed on timelines that rarely align neatly with your operating expenses. You pay your crew every week. You buy materials before the work begins. Yet payment from clients typically arrives 30, 60, or even 90 days after invoice submission on commercial and government projects.
A working capital loan or revolving line of credit addresses this fundamental imbalance. Rather than turning down projects because you lack the cash to mobilize, you can draw on your credit line to cover startup costs and repay it when the project payment arrives.
A business line of credit functions similarly to a credit card but with significantly higher limits and lower rates. You are approved for a maximum credit limit, and you can draw funds up to that limit at any time, repaying as cash comes in. Interest accrues only on the outstanding balance, not on the full credit limit. This flexibility makes it ideal for a project-based business where capital needs fluctuate dramatically from month to month.
For a marine contractor billing $2 million annually, a $200,000 to $400,000 line of credit is a reasonable target that can smooth out seasonal and project-based cash flow gaps effectively.
The general rule is to match the financing term to the life of the asset or the purpose of the capital. Short-term financing works for:
Long-term financing works for:
Qualification requirements vary significantly by lender type and product. Here is what you need to know across the spectrum:
Alternative lenders focus on business performance and cash flow rather than exclusively on credit scores and collateral. Typical baseline requirements include:
If your credit score is lower than you would like, bad credit business loans specifically designed for contractors with challenged credit history may still be available to you.
Banks typically require 680+ personal credit scores, 2+ years in business, detailed financial statements, and often personal collateral. Approval timelines run 30-60 days. While rates are lower, the barriers to access are much higher and many marine contractors will not qualify.
SBA loan requirements fall between banks and alternative lenders. You generally need a credit score of 650 or higher, 2+ years in business, demonstrable ability to repay based on business financials, and a clear business purpose for the funds. The SBA also requires that you have sought financing through conventional channels first and been declined, or that the terms available would be onerous enough to harm the business.
Before applying for any business loan, take steps to strengthen your application:
Our team reviews your full business picture, not just your credit score. Marine contractors with strong revenue history often qualify even with imperfect credit.
Check Your Options NowSeasonality is a defining feature of the marine construction business in most U.S. markets. In northern states, construction activity on or near frozen waterways may be impossible from November through March. Coastal markets may see demand peaks tied to boating season, vacation home construction, and commercial marina upgrades. Even in year-round markets like Florida and the Gulf Coast, permitting cycles and weather patterns create uneven project flow.
Smart marine contractors think about capital the way they think about tide charts: predictable patterns that require planning. A seasonal capital strategy includes:
Government and municipal marine construction contracts can provide more stable, year-round revenue but come with their own cash flow challenges. Public agencies typically pay on 30-60 day net terms, and the contracting process requires bonds and performance guarantees that tie up capital. A line of credit or working capital facility specifically sized for your government contract portfolio can be structured to accommodate these longer payment cycles.
According to Forbes, businesses with seasonal revenue patterns benefit most from flexible credit products that can be drawn and repaid multiple times, rather than single-disbursement term loans that require fixed monthly payments regardless of revenue.
Crestmont Capital is a leading U.S. business lender specializing in funding for contractors and trades businesses. We understand that marine construction companies operate differently from standard businesses, and our funding solutions are designed to match the realities of project-based, seasonal work.
Unlike traditional banks that evaluate businesses based primarily on credit scores and collateral, Crestmont Capital's underwriting team looks at the complete picture of your business health. We consider your revenue history, your backlog of signed contracts, your equipment assets, and your industry track record. This approach allows us to approve many marine contractors who have been turned down by conventional lenders.
Our products for marine contractors include:
Applying with Crestmont Capital takes minutes, not weeks. Our digital application process requires basic business information and 3-6 months of bank statements to get started. For larger amounts, we may request tax returns and financial statements. Many applicants receive a decision within hours and funding within 24-72 hours of approval.
We have funded marine contractors at every stage of growth, from solo operators building their first work barge to established firms with multi-million dollar annual revenue seeking capital to expand into new markets. Similar to how we approach boat repair business financing, we understand that marine industry businesses have unique cycles that standard lenders often misread.
Understanding the specific scenarios where marine construction financing creates value helps you identify when to seek capital proactively rather than reactively. Here are common situations where contractors have used business loans effectively:
A dock-building company doing $500,000 per year in residential work spots an opportunity to bid on a $2 million commercial marina expansion. The problem: the job requires equipment they do not own and a crew larger than their current payroll. A combination of equipment financing and a working capital loan allows them to purchase the equipment, hire the additional labor, and fund mobilization costs while waiting for the first progress payment.
An aging barge fleet increases maintenance costs, reduces productivity, and can create safety and compliance issues. Equipment financing allows a marine contractor to replace or upgrade their fleet without depleting the cash reserves they need for daily operations. The improved reliability and capacity often generates enough additional revenue to cover the financing payments with margin to spare.
A northern lake contractor generates 80% of their revenue between April and October. Without working capital financing, they may struggle to retain skilled employees, maintain equipment, and handle fixed costs during the winter months. A properly structured line of credit or seasonal working capital loan bridges this gap, allowing them to retain their team and be ready to execute as soon as the season opens.
Waterfront construction projects frequently face permit delays from Army Corps of Engineers, state environmental agencies, and local municipalities. When a permitted project is delayed by 60-90 days, a contractor may have already committed to material purchases, equipment deployments, and labor agreements. Working capital financing covers the carrying costs during forced delays without disrupting business operations.
This is an area where marine contractors differ from inland construction companies. Permitting delays can be longer, more unpredictable, and more costly, making flexible capital access even more critical. You can see how similar financing challenges apply in adjacent industries in our guide to concrete contractor business loans.
A critical piece of equipment failing mid-project can cost a marine contractor far more than the repair itself. Rental alternatives for specialized marine equipment are limited. Being down for even a week can result in liquidated damages penalties on commercial contracts, crew layoffs, and reputational damage with clients. A short-term loan can fund emergency repairs immediately, protecting far more revenue than the cost of capital.
Consolidation is accelerating in the marine construction sector as larger contractors with better capital access acquire smaller operators. If you have an opportunity to acquire a competitor's customer list, equipment, or entire business, SBA 7(a) financing or a conventional term loan can fund the acquisition while keeping your working capital intact.
According to a report from CNBC, small business acquisitions in the construction sector have increased significantly, driven by owners seeking to scale faster through acquisition than through organic growth alone.
Requirements vary by lender and product. Alternative lenders like Crestmont Capital typically work with credit scores as low as 550-600 for most products. SBA loans generally require 650 or higher, while traditional bank loans typically require 680 or above. A strong revenue history and signed contract backlog can sometimes offset a lower credit score with alternative lenders.
How much can a marine contractor borrow?Loan amounts depend on your annual revenue, credit profile, time in business, and the specific product. Working capital loans and lines of credit are typically sized at 10-20% of annual revenue. Equipment loans can be structured for up to 100% of the equipment value. SBA loans go up to $5 million. Well-qualified marine contractors with strong revenue can often access $1 million or more through a combination of products.
Can I get financing for used marine equipment?Yes. Most equipment lenders will finance used marine equipment, though they may require an appraisal or survey to establish current market value. Equipment must typically be in good working condition and meet age limits (usually no older than 10-15 years for most lenders, though some will go older). Having documentation of maintenance history and any recent upgrades strengthens your application.
How fast can I get funded?Funding speed varies dramatically. Alternative lenders like Crestmont Capital can fund working capital loans and lines of credit in 24-72 hours after approval, with same-day funding available for some products. Equipment loans typically close in 3-7 business days. SBA loans take 30-90 days. If you need capital quickly, an alternative lender is typically the fastest path to funding.
Do I need to put up collateral for a marine construction business loan?Not necessarily. Many alternative lending products are unsecured or require only a general business lien rather than specific collateral. Equipment loans use the financed equipment as collateral, eliminating the need for other assets. SBA loans and bank loans typically require more substantial collateral. For larger loan amounts, personal guarantees are common across most lender types.
Can I get a business loan if I have seasonal revenue?Yes. Seasonal businesses are common in construction, and lenders experienced with this sector understand seasonal revenue patterns. When applying, submit bank statements that include your peak revenue months to show your strongest performance. Some lenders offer seasonal repayment structures that reduce required payments during slow months. A line of credit is often the best product for seasonal businesses because you can draw and repay in sync with your revenue cycle.
What documents do I need to apply for a marine construction business loan?For alternative lenders, you typically need a completed application, 3-6 months of business bank statements, and a valid government ID. For larger amounts, lenders may also request the last 1-2 years of business tax returns, a profit and loss statement, and details on existing debt. For SBA loans, expect to provide 2-3 years of tax returns, personal financial statements, a business plan or financial projections, and documentation of business ownership.
Can a new marine construction business get a loan?Startup financing is more limited than funding for established businesses. Some alternative lenders will work with businesses as young as 6 months if they show strong revenue. SBA Microloan programs can fund startups with the right business plan and owner qualifications. Equipment financing is often more accessible for newer businesses because the equipment itself secures the loan. Personal credit score and owner experience in the industry carry more weight for startup applications.
Are interest rates higher for marine contractors than other businesses?Not necessarily due to industry type. Interest rates are primarily determined by your credit score, time in business, revenue, and the loan product. Marine construction is not considered a higher-risk industry category by most lenders. Rates are similar to other specialty contractors. Equipment loans typically carry the lowest rates because they are secured, while unsecured short-term working capital products carry higher rates to reflect the speed and accessibility they provide.
How do lenders view contract backlog for marine contractors?Signed contract backlog is a powerful positive signal for any project-based business. If you have $500,000 in signed contracts over the next 6 months, some lenders will factor that contracted revenue into their credit decision, potentially increasing the amount you can borrow and improving your rate. Have copies of signed contracts ready when you apply, especially for larger loan requests.
What is the best loan for buying a work barge?Equipment financing is typically the best option for purchasing a work barge. The barge serves as collateral, which reduces the lender's risk and typically results in lower rates and better terms than unsecured options. For new or late-model barges, you can often finance up to 100% of the purchase price. For older vessels, expect to make a down payment of 10-20%. SBA 504 loans can also be used for large vessel purchases if the vessel qualifies as a long-term fixed asset.
Can I use a business loan to hire more crew members?Yes. Working capital loans and lines of credit can be used to fund payroll as you scale up for new contracts or an expanded season. This is one of the most common uses of marine contractor financing. The ability to hire experienced marine construction labor before your project revenue arrives lets you commit to contracts with confidence and execute without being cash-constrained at startup.
Does applying for a loan hurt my credit score?Most alternative lenders, including Crestmont Capital, perform a soft credit pull during the initial pre-qualification process, which does not affect your credit score. A hard inquiry only occurs when you proceed with a formal application. The impact of a hard inquiry is typically small (a few points) and temporary, usually recovering within 3-6 months. Having multiple lenders do hard pulls in a short window can have more impact, so try to limit formal applications until you have identified your preferred lender.
Can I refinance existing marine construction business debt?Yes. Debt consolidation and refinancing are legitimate uses of business loan proceeds. If you have high-rate merchant cash advances or short-term loans from prior periods, refinancing into a longer-term product with better rates can significantly improve your cash flow. SBA 7(a) loans specifically allow for debt refinancing in many cases. Crestmont Capital can review your existing debt structure and help identify whether refinancing makes financial sense for your business.
What industries are considered marine construction for loan purposes?For business loan purposes, marine construction includes dock building and installation, seawall and bulkhead construction, pier and wharf construction, boat lift installation, marine pile driving and foundation work, waterfront grading and dredging (for construction purposes), floating dock systems, marina construction, and waterfront retaining structures. If your business generates revenue from constructing, installing, or repairing structures on or adjacent to water, you likely qualify under the marine construction category.
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Apply NowMarine construction is demanding, capital-intensive work that rewards contractors who manage their finances as skillfully as they manage their projects. The good news is that access to capital for marine contractors has never been greater, with a range of products spanning from fast-turnaround alternative lending to long-term SBA programs that can fund virtually any growth initiative you have in mind.
The key is matching the right financing product to the right need, applying with a lender who understands project-based businesses, and using capital proactively rather than reactively. Waiting until a cash crisis to apply for financing puts you at a disadvantage. Building relationships with lenders before you urgently need them gives you options and leverage.
Crestmont Capital has been helping contractors across every specialty access the funding they need to build great businesses. Whether you need $50,000 to replace a piece of aging equipment or $2 million to fund a major commercial expansion, our team is ready to work with you on a solution tailored to the realities of your marine construction business.
Take the first step today. A five-minute application could put capital in your account within 48 hours.
Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for general educational purposes only and is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Funding terms, qualifications, and product availability may vary and are subject to change without notice. Crestmont Capital does not guarantee approval, rates, or specific outcomes. For personalized information about your business funding options, contact our team directly.