If you are currently using merchant cash advances (MCAs) to fund your business, you are paying some of the highest financing costs available — effectively 40% to 150%+ APR in many cases. The good news: MCAs are often a stepping stone, not a permanent situation. With the right preparation strategy and a realistic timeline, most businesses that rely on MCAs today can qualify for significantly lower-cost traditional financing within 6 to 18 months. This guide explains exactly how to make that transition — what you need to change, how long it will take, and what lenders need to see.
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The financial stakes of this transition are significant. Consider a business that currently cycles through $100,000 per year in MCA advances at a 1.35 factor rate:
Over 3 years, transitioning from MCA to traditional financing on this volume of borrowing saves approximately $85,000. That is real money that stays in the business instead of going to advance providers — money that could fund growth, build reserves, or fund owner compensation.
The MCA Trap: Many businesses get stuck in MCA cycles not because they want to, but because daily remittances consume cash flow that could be building the financial profile needed to qualify for better financing. Breaking this cycle requires deliberate action — not just hoping for circumstances to improve on their own.
| Product | Typical APR | Annual Cost on $100K | Repayment Structure |
|---|---|---|---|
| MCA (1.35 factor, 6 mo.) | ~70% | $35,000 | Daily ACH |
| Online Term Loan | 20%–35% | $10K–$18K | Daily/Weekly ACH |
| Business Line of Credit | 12%–25% | $6K–$13K | Monthly, on balance |
| Bank Term Loan | 8%–13% | $4K–$7K | Monthly amortized |
| SBA Loan | 9%–13% | $5K–$7K | Monthly amortized |
Even transitioning from an MCA to an online term loan at 25% APR cuts your annual financing cost by 50%+ on the same principal. Moving to a bank line of credit at 15% APR represents a 75%+ cost reduction.
Understanding what blocks traditional lenders from approving businesses currently reliant on MCAs helps you focus your improvement efforts precisely:
The single most impactful action is eliminating existing MCA positions. While actively paying an MCA, your daily cash flow is constrained, your DSCR is compressed, and your bank statements clearly show the MCA remittances that signal ongoing high-cost borrowing to lenders. Pay off the current MCA as quickly as your cash flow allows — even if it means temporarily reduced owner compensation or deferred non-essential capital expenditures.
After the final MCA payment, let your bank statements run clean for at least 3 months — ideally 6 months. Clean statements (no daily MCA debits, consistent deposits, no overdrafts) demonstrate that your business can operate without high-cost short-term financing. This period also allows your DSCR to recover as daily remittance obligations disappear.
Simultaneously with steps 1 and 2, work on personal credit improvement. Pay all personal obligations on time. Reduce credit card utilization below 30%. Dispute any inaccurate negative items. Avoid new credit applications. Even 6 months of consistent positive behavior can add 30 to 50 points to a personal credit score — potentially moving from a declined profile to an approved one.
Establish trade accounts with suppliers who report to D&B and Experian Business. Pay those accounts early to build PAYDEX score above 80. Open a business credit card that reports to business bureaus. Business credit improvement demonstrates financial discipline independently of personal credit.
Do not apply for a bank loan or SBA loan immediately after paying off your MCA. Start with mid-tier products: an online bank statement term loan or a modest revolving line of credit. Make 6 to 12 months of perfect payments. This creates a payment history record with a new lender — the track record that enables access to better products in the next step.
With 6 to 12 months of clean bank statements, improved credit, and a positive payment history on a mid-tier product, apply for bank lines of credit, SBA Express loans, or other lower-rate products. Your financial profile now tells a fundamentally different story than it did during the MCA phase.
Profile: $30,000+/month in deposits, 580 personal credit, currently on MCA
Timeline to bank-quality financing: 9 to 15 months
Profile: $20,000/month deposits, 630 personal credit, finishing last MCA payment
Timeline to bank-quality financing: 6 to 12 months
Profile: $40,000+/month deposits, 700 credit, using MCAs for convenience not necessity
Timeline to bank-quality financing: 3 to 6 months
If you cannot immediately pay off your current MCA, there are productive actions you can take while still in the repayment cycle:
In almost all cases, yes — pay off the MCA before applying for traditional financing. Here is why:
The one exception: if a lender is willing to use the proceeds of the new loan to pay off the MCA simultaneously (a consolidation), some lenders will consider this if the new DSCR calculation excludes the MCA payment. Discuss this specifically with any lender you are working with.
For guidance on how MCA repayment works and what your remaining balance implications are, see our How MCA Repayment Works: The Complete Guide for Business Owners. For more on reducing your overall cost of capital once you have transitioned, see our How to Reduce Your Cost of Capital: The Complete Guide for Business Owners.
Ready to Graduate from MCA Financing?
Crestmont Capital helps businesses transition from high-cost MCAs to lower-rate traditional financing. Tell us where you are and we'll map out the path forward.
Explore Your Options →Crestmont Capital specializes in helping businesses at exactly this transition point — moving away from expensive short-term financing toward more sustainable, lower-cost facilities. Our specialists evaluate your current financial position, identify the exact gaps between where you are and where you need to be for each product type, and create a specific action plan for making the transition on the most realistic timeline.
Many of our clients come to us while still in an MCA. We help them understand their options, plan the payoff, and position their business to qualify for better financing as quickly as possible.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. Financing timelines and qualification requirements vary by lender, borrower profile, and market conditions. Consult a qualified financial advisor before making financing decisions.