Private security is one of the most contract-intensive service businesses in the United States. Security guard companies win multi-year contracts with commercial real estate owners, hospitals, corporate campuses, retail chains, and event venues — then immediately face a substantial capital challenge: guards must be hired, licensed, uniformed, and deployed within days of contract award, but the first invoice payment from commercial clients arrives 30 to 60 days later. This startup funding gap, combined with the ongoing need for vehicles, equipment, training, and bonding, makes access to working capital one of the most critical factors in whether a security company can grow or is limited by its current cash position. This guide covers every financing option available to security guard companies, what lenders look for, and how to get funded.
In This Article
Security guard companies have a distinctive financial structure that creates recurring capital needs regardless of how profitable the business is. The core challenge: labor cost is immediate, but revenue is deferred.
When a security company wins a new contract — even a large, multi-year agreement with a creditworthy commercial client — the company must:
The first invoice payment from the commercial client typically arrives 30 to 60 days after service begins. For a 10-officer contract, the startup capital requirement before the first payment can reach $20,000 to $50,000. A company winning three new contracts simultaneously faces $60,000 to $150,000 in ramp-up capital needs.
Beyond contract ramp-up, security companies have ongoing financing needs:
Lender View: Security guard companies with documented multi-year contracts from creditworthy institutional clients (hospitals, REITs, retail chains) are viewed favorably by lenders and invoice financiers. The client's creditworthiness is often the primary underwriting factor — making invoice financing particularly well-suited to security companies. For more on working capital solutions, see our When to Use a Working Capital Loan: The Complete Guide for Small Business Owners.
A revolving business line of credit is the most valuable ongoing financing tool for security guard companies. Draw to cover weekly payroll before monthly client payments arrive, repay when invoices clear, draw again for the next week's payroll gap. A $50,000 to $200,000 line of credit functions as a permanent payroll bridge that grows with the business.
Invoice financing advances 80% to 90% of outstanding commercial invoices immediately rather than waiting 30 to 60 days. For security companies with large commercial billing — $100,000+ in monthly invoices — invoice financing converts outstanding receivables to immediate cash. This is often the most cost-effective solution specifically because the advance is tied to the creditworthiness of your commercial clients (hospitals, corporations), not your own balance sheet. See our Invoice Financing: The Complete Guide for Small Business Owners for a comprehensive breakdown.
Term loans provide a lump sum for major investments — fleet acquisition, technology buildout, or contract acquisition costs. Terms range from 12 to 84 months with rates from 6% to 45%+ depending on lender and borrower profile. Online alternative lenders approve in 1 to 5 days; banks take 2 to 8 weeks at lower rates.
Equipment financing covers patrol vehicles, guard equipment, security technology (CCTV cameras, access control panels), and surveillance systems using those assets as collateral. Lower rates and easier approval than unsecured financing because tangible assets back the loan.
SBA 7(a) loans offer the lowest rates for established security companies needing $100,000+ for major growth initiatives, fleet expansion, or acquisitions. Approval requires 60 to 90 days and thorough documentation but delivers the best long-term rates available to small business borrowers.
MCAs provide fast capital (24–48 hours) repaid through a percentage of daily card transactions. Security companies typically have limited card transaction volume (most revenue is commercial invoice-based), making MCAs structurally less ideal than for retail businesses. Best reserved for urgent short-term needs when other options are unavailable.
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Apply Now →Invoice financing is the financing product most specifically suited to the security guard business model. Here is why it works particularly well:
Invoice financing lenders advance money against your outstanding invoices. Their primary underwriting concern is whether your clients will pay — not whether your business will survive. Security guard companies that serve institutional clients (hospital systems, commercial REITs, corporate campuses, retail chains) have invoices backed by creditworthy payers that invoice financiers view very favorably. A $50,000 invoice from a major hospital system or national retail chain is easy to advance against because the probability of collection is extremely high.
Both solve the payroll gap but differ in structure. A line of credit is more flexible — usable for any purpose — and typically less expensive if you have strong personal credit. Invoice financing is easier to access (doesn't require strong personal credit), scales with your revenue automatically, and doesn't require a personal guarantee in all cases. Many growing security companies use invoice financing early in their growth and transition to a business line of credit as their credit profile strengthens.
Security guard companies qualify for SBA 7(a) and SBA Express loans as legitimate small businesses in the business services and protective services sector. Key parameters:
| SBA Program | Max Amount | Best Use | Min. Credit | Time to Fund |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SBA 7(a) | $5 million | Fleet, technology, working capital, acquisition | 650+ | 60–90 days |
| SBA Express | $500,000 | Working capital, equipment, lines of credit | 650+ | 30–45 days |
| SBA Microloan | $50,000 | Startup equipment, uniforms, initial working capital | 560+ | 30–60 days |
| Loan Type | Typical Rate | Term | Amount Range | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SBA 7(a) Loan | 10%–13% | Up to 10 years | $50K–$5M | 60–90 days |
| Bank Term Loan | 8%–15% | 1–7 years | $25K–$500K | 2–8 weeks |
| Online Term Loan | 15%–45% | 3 months–5 years | $5K–$500K | 1–5 days |
| Equipment / Vehicle Financing | 5%–22% | 2–6 years | $5K–$500K | 1–7 days |
| Business Line of Credit | 8%–45% | Revolving (1–3 yr facility) | $10K–$250K | 1–7 days |
| Invoice Financing | 1%–3% per month | Per invoice (net-30/60) | 80–90% of invoice value | 1–3 days |
| Merchant Cash Advance | Factor 1.15–1.45 (60–150%+ eff. APR) | 3–18 months | $5K–$500K | 24–48 hours |
Covering the weekly payroll gap between disbursing guard wages and receiving monthly client payments is the single highest-impact use of financing for security guard companies. A business line of credit or invoice financing facility that provides continuous payroll coverage allows security companies to accept more contracts than current cash flow would otherwise permit. For a company with $200,000 in monthly guard payroll and $220,000 in monthly billings (net-30), a $100,000 line of credit eliminates the timing constraint permanently.
Winning a new contract requires immediate deployment capital: uniforms ($200–$800 per guard), training and licensing ($100–$500 per guard), background screening ($50–$200 per guard), and possibly deposits on additional insurance coverage. For a 20-guard contract, ramp-up costs can reach $10,000 to $30,000 before the first invoice is issued. A working capital loan or line draw covers this gap and is repaid from the first month's invoice payment.
Mobile patrol contracts require marked patrol vehicles. Commercial vehicle financing for patrol cars, SUVs, and vans — using the vehicles as collateral — spreads the fleet investment over 3 to 5 years while new mobile patrol contracts generate revenue. A 5-vehicle patrol fleet at $40,000 per vehicle requires $200,000 in capital that few growing security companies can fund from cash flow alone.
Guard tour systems, GPS tracking for patrol vehicles, body cameras, CCTV systems, and security management platforms improve service quality and enable competitive bids on technology-forward contracts. Equipment financing covers these assets over 3 to 5 years. Technology investment also creates differentiation that supports contract wins at premium pricing.
Purchasing an established security guard company with existing contracts, licensed officers, and client relationships is often more efficient than organic growth. SBA 7(a) acquisition loans can cover the purchase price plus working capital. Lenders evaluate the target company's contract backlog, client retention, and officer licensing compliance as primary underwriting criteria.
Crestmont Capital is the #1 rated business lender in the United States. We work with security guard companies at every stage — from startups winning their first commercial contracts to regional security firms with hundreds of officers across multiple markets. We understand the payroll gap challenge, the contract ramp-up capital need, and the fleet and technology investment requirements specific to security companies. We offer:
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Apply Now →Disclaimer: This article is provided for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. Loan rates, terms, and requirements vary by lender and are subject to change. Statistics cited reflect publicly available industry data as of the publication date and may not reflect current conditions. Consult a qualified financial advisor before making business financing decisions.