Running a restaurant is one of the most capital-intensive and cash-flow-intensive business models in small business. Equipment breaks down during the dinner rush. A new lease requires a significant build-out investment. A competitor opens nearby and marketing spend must increase to maintain market share. Seasonal slowdowns compress revenue while fixed costs - rent, labor, utilities - continue unabated. And growth, whether through a second location, a food truck, or a catering expansion, almost always requires capital that today's cash flow cannot supply on its own.
Restaurant business loans give owners and operators the capital to purchase and maintain kitchen equipment, manage cash flow between revenue cycles, fund renovations and expansions, invest in marketing, and grow their concept beyond a single location. This complete guide covers every financing option available to restaurant businesses in 2026, what lenders look for, how to qualify, and how Crestmont Capital helps restaurant owners access the funding they need.
In This Article
Restaurant business loans are commercial financing products designed for full-service restaurants, quick-service restaurants (QSRs), fast casual concepts, food trucks, bars, catering companies, and other foodservice businesses. They include restaurant equipment financing, working capital loans, SBA loans, merchant cash advances, lines of credit, and specialty restaurant financing products - each structured to address the specific cash flow and capital investment patterns of foodservice operations.
Restaurants have financial characteristics that make them one of the most challenging industries for traditional bank financing. Thin margins (typically 3-9% net) mean a single bad month or equipment failure can create serious cash flow pressure. Revenue is driven by seat turns and check averages that can vary significantly with weather, competition, and the economy. Equipment requires substantial capital investment and regular replacement. And new locations require major build-out spending before generating a single dollar of revenue.
According to the U.S. Small Business Administration, restaurants are one of the most common types of small business in the United States and one of the most frequent users of small business financing. With over 1 million restaurant locations employing 15 million Americans, the restaurant industry's financing needs are substantial and persistent.
Industry Snapshot: U.S. restaurant industry sales exceed $1 trillion annually. Despite strong consumer demand, restaurants face persistent cash flow challenges from thin margins, seasonal variation, equipment capital requirements, and the upfront investment required for new locations. Access to working capital and equipment financing is consistently cited as a top operational priority for restaurant operators of all sizes.
Here are the most relevant financing products for restaurant businesses.
Restaurant equipment financing covers commercial ovens, ranges, fryers, refrigeration units, dishwashers, POS systems, walk-in coolers, exhaust hoods, and all other kitchen equipment. Equipment financing spreads significant capital costs over 36-60 months with the equipment as collateral, preserving working capital for food costs and labor. Section 179 deductions may allow immediate expensing of financed equipment in the year of purchase.
Working capital loans provide fast, unsecured capital for restaurant operations - covering food costs and supplies, bridging payroll during slow periods, funding marketing campaigns, and managing cash flow during seasonal slowdowns or unexpected disruptions. These loans fund within 24-48 hours with minimal documentation.
A business line of credit gives restaurants revolving access to capital for operational needs. Draw during slow months to cover fixed costs, repay when busy periods generate strong cash flow, and draw again as needed. The revolving structure is well-suited to restaurant revenue volatility and seasonal patterns.
SBA 7(a) loans offer competitive rates and long repayment terms for restaurants making major investments - opening a new location, acquiring an existing concept, funding a major renovation, or purchasing kitchen equipment packages. With terms up to 10 years for equipment and working capital, SBA loans provide the most favorable financing for qualifying restaurant businesses.
A merchant cash advance provides upfront capital in exchange for a percentage of future credit and debit card sales. For restaurants with strong card transaction volume, repayments automatically scale with daily sales - lower on slow days, higher on busy ones. While the cost of capital is higher than conventional loans, MCAs offer extremely fast funding (often same-day) for urgent needs like emergency equipment repair or a time-sensitive opportunity.
Commercial kitchen equipment financing specifically addresses the heavy-duty, high-value equipment that drives restaurant operations. Full kitchen package financing allows restaurant owners to outfit an entirely new kitchen or renovate an existing one with structured multi-year payments rather than a devastating lump-sum capital outlay.
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Apply Now →Here are the most common ways restaurant owners put financing to work.
A broken walk-in cooler during summer, a failing commercial oven during the holidays, or an aging exhaust hood that fails inspection - kitchen equipment failures are disruptive and expensive. Equipment financing provides fast access to replacement equipment, minimizing downtime and revenue loss. For planned upgrades, financing spreads the cost over time while the restaurant benefits immediately from improved capacity and efficiency. As Forbes notes, equipment investment is one of the highest-ROI capital deployments for foodservice businesses.
Restaurant revenue is almost universally seasonal. Fine dining restaurants slow in January. Beach-town eateries close for winter. Family restaurants see traffic dip in summer when families travel. A business line of credit or working capital loan maintains operations through slow months - covering rent, utilities, and minimum staffing until strong seasons return.
Expanding a successful restaurant concept to a second location is one of the most significant financial commitments in foodservice. Build-out costs, equipment packages, furniture and fixtures, initial inventory, and operating capital for the ramp-up period easily total $300,000-$700,000 or more. SBA loans or term loans structure these investments with repayment timelines that reflect how long it takes a new restaurant location to reach positive cash flow. Our guide on financing a second business location covers restaurant expansion financing.
Restaurant concepts age. Dining room aesthetics that felt fresh five years ago may now feel dated compared to newer competition. A renovation or concept refresh - updating decor, upgrading seating, adding outdoor dining, or modernizing the bar area - can meaningfully increase guest counts and average check. Working capital loans or SBA loans fund these revenue-enhancing investments.
Buying an established restaurant with an existing customer base, trained staff, and proven location is often faster and less risky than building from scratch. Practice acquisition-style loans and SBA 7(a) loans finance restaurant acquisitions with terms that account for the ongoing revenue value of the business being acquired. Our guide on business acquisition loans covers this strategy in detail.
Restaurant food costs represent 28-35% of revenue and must be paid to suppliers weekly or bi-weekly regardless of how the dining room is performing. When revenue dips, a working capital loan or line of credit ensures suppliers are paid on time - protecting the vendor relationships and credit terms that are essential to smooth restaurant operations.
Many restaurants leave significant revenue on the table by underinvesting in marketing and catering development. A working capital loan can fund targeted digital marketing, social media campaigns, loyalty program launches, or the equipment needed to launch a catering operation - all investments that generate measurable revenue returns.
Crestmont Capital is the #1 rated business lender in the United States, offering comprehensive financing products for independent restaurants, multi-unit operators, QSR franchisees, food trucks, catering companies, and all foodservice businesses.
We understand the restaurant business model - the thin margins, the equipment intensity, the labor cost challenges, and the capital requirements of growth. Our advisors evaluate restaurant businesses holistically, considering revenue trends, seasonality patterns, lease quality, and concept strength rather than applying rigid bank criteria that often exclude well-run restaurants with thin profit margins.
Financing products for restaurants through Crestmont Capital include:
Why Crestmont Capital: Same-day decisions on many applications. Transparent pricing with no hidden fees. Advisors who understand the restaurant P&L and the real economics of foodservice growth. Apply at crestmontcapital.com in minutes.
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Apply Now →Qualification varies by product and lender. Here is what most lenders evaluate for restaurant business loan applications.
Lenders review annual gross sales to assess repayment capacity. Most working capital products require at least $100,000-$150,000 in annual revenue. Larger loans and SBA products typically require $250,000 or more. Restaurant lenders understand that thin margins mean gross revenue is a better repayment indicator than net profit for many foodservice businesses.
Most conventional lenders and SBA programs prefer two or more years of restaurant operating history. Alternative lenders can work with restaurants that have been open for six months or more. Restaurant equipment financing may be accessible even for newer operations since the equipment serves as collateral.
A personal credit score of 650 or above opens access to most restaurant financing. Equipment financing can be more credit-flexible. SBA loans require 680 or higher. Alternative lenders may work with scores as low as 580-600 for restaurants with strong daily card sales volume. According to CNBC, restaurants with consistent, growing revenue trends and organized financial records have significantly higher loan approval rates than those with inconsistent documentation.
For merchant cash advances and some working capital products, lenders evaluate average daily credit and debit card sales as the primary repayment metric. Restaurants typically have high card transaction volume relative to other small businesses, which can be a significant advantage when accessing MCA and revenue-based products.
For larger loans, lenders consider the quality and remaining term of your restaurant lease. A strong lease in a high-traffic location with 5+ years remaining is a much more favorable credit situation than a month-to-month lease in a declining market. If you own your building, that real estate is valuable collateral that can support larger loan amounts and better terms.
| Product | Best For | Typical Amount | Funding Speed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Equipment Financing | Ovens, fryers, refrigeration, POS | $10K - $1M+ | 2-5 days |
| Working Capital Loan | Food costs, payroll, marketing | $25K - $5M | 1-3 days |
| Line of Credit | Seasonal gaps, ongoing operations | $10K - $500K | 2-5 days |
| Merchant Cash Advance | Fast capital, high card volume | $5K - $500K | Same day |
| SBA Loan | New location, acquisition, renovation | $50K - $5M | 30-90 days |
| Revenue-Based Financing | Variable revenue, flexible repayment | $25K - $2M | 1-3 days |
These six scenarios reflect situations restaurant owners commonly face when seeking financing.
A full-service Italian restaurant loses its main walk-in cooler during summer service. Replacing it costs $28,000. A working capital loan approved same-day funds the replacement unit. The restaurant is back to full operational capacity within 72 hours, avoiding what could have been weeks of reduced menu offerings and significant revenue loss during the busiest season of the year.
A popular lakeside casual dining restaurant generates 65% of annual revenue from May through September. During January and February, weekly sales drop 55% while rent ($14,500/month), core staff wages ($28,000/month), and utilities continue. A $95,000 draw on the restaurant's business line of credit covers fixed costs through the two slowest months. When March traffic begins to recover, the line starts to be repaid.
A fast casual bowls restaurant with strong same-store sales and a waiting list for weekend reservations wants to open a second location in an adjacent market. Build-out, commercial kitchen equipment, furniture and fixtures, initial food inventory, and opening marketing costs total $420,000. An SBA 7(a) loan structures the investment over 10 years with manageable monthly payments. Location two reaches breakeven in month 11 and becomes the higher-revenue of the two stores by year three.
A neighborhood bar and grill has an opportunity to add a 40-seat outdoor patio with a bar service station and string lighting - an investment the owner estimates will add $180,000 in annual revenue during warm months. The build cost is $85,000. A working capital loan funds the patio construction during winter, allowing the expansion to be complete and open for the spring-summer season. The patio generates a first-season ROI of over 100% on the build investment. Our restaurant financing resource on restaurant equipment and expansion financing covers patio and expansion projects.
An established pizza restaurant has the opportunity to acquire a struggling competitor location two miles away. The competitor has loyal customers, a functional kitchen, and an existing staff, but has been mismanaged financially. The acquisition price is $240,000. An SBA 7(a) acquisition loan structures the purchase. Post-acquisition, improved operations and menu integration immediately lift revenue. The acquired location reaches profitability within five months under new management.
A well-known food truck operator with a strong following and $380,000 in annual truck revenue wants to open a small brick-and-mortar restaurant. A combination SBA loan for $320,000 funds the lease security deposit, interior build-out, commercial kitchen equipment, and opening operating capital. The brick-and-mortar location achieves $540,000 in annual revenue in its first full year while the food truck continues to operate at events and festivals.
Applying for restaurant financing through Crestmont Capital is designed to match the fast pace of restaurant operations.
Have these ready: three to six months of business bank statements, a government-issued ID, basic restaurant information, and a summary of annual revenue and seasonality. For equipment financing, have a vendor quote or equipment description. For SBA loans, two years of business tax returns and a P&L statement, plus your lease agreement.
Crestmont Capital's application takes under 10 minutes. No fee and no credit score impact from submitting.
For most working capital and equipment products, you will receive a decision within 24 hours. Full transparency on rate, term, and total cost. No obligation to accept.
Working capital loans fund within one to three days. Equipment financing takes two to five days. Your advisor remains available as your restaurant grows.
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Equipment loans, working capital, SBA financing - Crestmont Capital has every product restaurant owners need. Apply today.
Apply Now →Most foodservice businesses qualify for commercial financing, including full-service restaurants, fast casual concepts, quick-service restaurants (QSR), pizza restaurants, bars and taverns, diners, cafes, food trucks, catering companies, and multi-unit restaurant groups. Key qualification factors are annual revenue, time in operation, and credit score.
Equipment financing typically ranges from $10,000 to $1 million or more for full kitchen packages. Working capital loans range from $25,000 to $5 million. Lines of credit range from $10,000 to $500,000. Merchant cash advances range from $5,000 to $500,000 based on card sales volume. SBA loans go up to $5 million. The amount depends on annual revenue, the specific product, and your restaurant's overall financial profile.
New restaurants (under one year old) have fewer financing options than established operations, but paths exist. Restaurant equipment financing with a personal guarantee is accessible even for very new locations. SBA start-up loans are available to new restaurant owners with strong personal credit and a business plan. After six months of consistent revenue, most working capital products become available. Franchisee financing programs may also provide start-up capital for franchised concepts.
A personal credit score of 650 or above opens access to most restaurant financing products. Equipment financing is more credit-flexible due to collateral. SBA loans require 680 or higher. Alternative lenders may work with scores as low as 580-600 for restaurants with strong daily card sales. Maintaining separate business and personal accounts and keeping clean financial records improves approval odds across all credit tiers.
Merchant cash advances fund same-day or next-day. Working capital loans from alternative lenders fund within 24-72 hours. Lines of credit typically take two to five days. Equipment financing takes two to five days. SBA loans take 30-90 days. For emergencies like equipment failure during peak season, working capital loans offer the fastest path to capital.
Most applications require three to six months of business bank statements, a government-issued ID, and basic restaurant information. For equipment financing, a vendor quote or description. For SBA loans, two years of business tax returns, a P&L statement, and a lease agreement. For MCAs, recent merchant processing statements showing card sales volume.
Equipment financing typically carries 8-18% APR. SBA loans carry approximately prime plus 2.25-4.75%, roughly 10-14% APR. Working capital loans from alternative lenders range from 8-30% APR. Lines of credit carry 10-25% APR. MCAs use factor rates (1.15-1.45) rather than APR. As reported by Reuters, small business lending rates have stabilized heading into 2026.
A merchant cash advance provides upfront capital in exchange for a percentage of future credit and debit card receipts. A daily holdback rate - typically 8-15% of daily card sales - is automatically deducted until the advance and fee are repaid. Repayments are naturally lower on slow days and higher on busy ones, aligning with restaurant revenue patterns. While MCAs carry higher effective costs than traditional loans, they offer extremely fast funding and minimal documentation requirements for operators who need capital quickly.
Yes. Restaurants qualify for SBA 7(a) loans for equipment packages, new location build-outs, acquisitions, renovations, and working capital. SBA loans require 680+ personal credit, 2+ years in business, and documented annual revenue. The process takes 30-90 days but provides the most favorable rates and terms available to qualifying restaurants. SBA loans are particularly well-suited for major restaurant expansions where the long repayment terms reduce monthly payment burden during the ramp-up period.
Restaurant equipment financing provides a loan specifically for purchasing commercial kitchen equipment with the equipment as collateral. Terms typically range from 36-60 months. Fixed monthly payments are made; the restaurant owns the equipment outright at the end of the term. Full kitchen package financing allows build-out of an entirely new kitchen with structured multi-year payments. Equipment can also be leased with options to purchase, upgrade, or return at lease end. Section 179 deductions may allow full expensing of financed equipment in the year of purchase.
Yes. Working capital loans and equipment financing can fund the addition of a catering operation - including catering equipment, vehicle purchase or leasing, marketing materials, and initial catering staff. Adding catering to an existing restaurant concept can significantly diversify revenue and improve overall business stability by reducing dependence on dining room seat turns.
Lenders evaluate restaurant businesses on full-year annual revenue, not just current month deposits. Seasonal restaurants should apply for lines of credit during strong selling periods to establish the facility before the slow season begins. Lenders experienced in foodservice financing understand that a January dip following a record December is normal and evaluate the full annual revenue picture rather than penalizing expected seasonal slowdowns.
For equipment, use restaurant equipment financing. For seasonal gaps and operational cash flow, use a working capital loan or line of credit. For urgent same-day needs, consider a merchant cash advance. For major expansions or acquisitions, use an SBA loan. For variable revenue periods, revenue-based financing offers the most flexible repayment. A Crestmont Capital advisor can help identify the right product for your restaurant at no cost or obligation.
Restaurant business loans give owners and operators the capital to maintain equipment, manage seasonal cash flow gaps, expand to new locations, renovate dining spaces, acquire established concepts, and invest in the marketing and catering capabilities that drive long-term growth. The capital-intensive, thin-margin nature of the restaurant business makes access to well-structured financing an essential operational tool for the owners who want to build lasting foodservice businesses.
Crestmont Capital specializes in helping restaurant owners access the right financing quickly, with advisors who understand how restaurant financials actually work. Whether you need emergency equipment financing today or an SBA loan to open your second location next quarter, apply now and put your restaurant on a stronger financial foundation.
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.