Urgent care franchises are among the fastest-growing segments in American healthcare. With walk-in patient volumes surging and consumers increasingly choosing convenient, affordable care over costly emergency rooms, the demand for urgent care services has never been stronger. Whether you are opening your first urgent care franchise location or expanding an established multi-site operation, securing the right financing is the critical step that separates a great opportunity from a great business.
This comprehensive guide walks you through every financing option available to urgent care franchise owners, the qualification requirements lenders look for, how to structure your funding strategy, and how Crestmont Capital helps healthcare entrepreneurs move from application to funding quickly and confidently.
The urgent care industry has undergone a dramatic transformation over the past decade. According to data from the Urgent Care Association, there are now more than 12,000 urgent care centers operating across the United States, and the market continues to expand. The sector is projected to reach over $30 billion in annual revenue by 2027, driven by aging demographics, rising insurance deductibles that push patients away from emergency rooms, and broader consumer demand for same-day, convenient care.
Franchise models have accelerated this growth considerably. Major urgent care franchise brands provide operators with proven clinical protocols, recognized brand names, technology platforms, and vendor relationships that reduce the trial-and-error typical of independent startups. Forbes has noted that franchise-based healthcare businesses tend to show stronger survival rates than independent competitors, partly because franchisors provide ongoing operational support and training.
For lenders, urgent care franchises represent a relatively attractive risk profile. Healthcare is a recession-resistant industry, patients keep coming regardless of economic conditions, and franchise brands provide the performance data and standardized financial models that make underwriting more predictable. This combination means urgent care franchise owners often have access to a wider range of financing options than entrepreneurs in less-established sectors.
Still, the capital requirements to open or expand an urgent care franchise are significant. Understanding your financing options before approaching a lender puts you in a much stronger position.
Before exploring loan options, it is essential to understand what you are actually financing. Urgent care franchise costs vary by brand, geography, and whether you are building from the ground up, converting an existing space, or acquiring a going-concern location. Here is a realistic breakdown of what most operators encounter:
Most urgent care franchise brands charge an initial franchise fee ranging from $35,000 to $75,000 per location. Multi-unit agreements sometimes reduce the per-unit fee but require a larger upfront commitment.
Converting a retail or commercial space into a fully functional urgent care clinic requires significant construction. Exam rooms, waiting areas, imaging rooms, procedure rooms, lab space, and ADA-compliant layouts all add up. Expect to budget between $150,000 and $500,000 for build-out depending on square footage and local construction costs.
Urgent care clinics require a broad range of equipment: X-ray machines, digital imaging systems, EKG equipment, lab analyzers, exam tables, autoclave sterilizers, and point-of-care testing devices. Equipment costs typically range from $100,000 to $300,000 for a full setup.
Insurance reimbursements and patient payments come on a delay. Most urgent care franchises need three to six months of operating capital in reserve to cover payroll, rent, supplies, and overhead while the revenue cycle catches up. Plan on $75,000 to $200,000 in working capital reserves.
Electronic health record (EHR) systems, practice management software, patient portal platforms, and billing software represent meaningful upfront and ongoing costs. Budget $15,000 to $40,000 for technology setup.
When all costs are combined, opening a new urgent care franchise location typically requires a total investment of $500,000 to $1.2 million. Existing location acquisitions can range even higher depending on patient volume and market position.
Crestmont Capital specializes in healthcare franchise lending. Get pre-qualified today.
Apply Now - Free & No ObligationNo single loan product covers every financing need for an urgent care franchise. Most successful operators use a combination of products tailored to different aspects of the business. Here are the primary loan types available:
Traditional term loans provide a lump sum that is repaid over a fixed period with regular payments. For urgent care franchises, term loans work well for build-out costs, franchise fees, and large equipment purchases. Loan amounts typically range from $50,000 to $5 million, with repayment terms from 2 to 10 years. Interest rates vary widely based on creditworthiness, lender type, and loan size.
Small business loans through alternative lenders like Crestmont Capital often have more flexible qualification standards than traditional bank products, with faster funding timelines - sometimes as quickly as 24 to 72 hours after approval.
The Small Business Administration's flagship loan program is one of the most popular choices for franchise financing. SBA 7(a) loans offer amounts up to $5 million, competitive interest rates, and longer repayment terms. The government guarantee reduces lender risk, which often translates to better terms for borrowers. More on SBA loans in the next section.
The SBA 504 program is specifically designed for major fixed asset purchases - think commercial real estate and major equipment. If you plan to purchase or construct the building that will house your urgent care franchise, a 504 loan may provide excellent long-term financing at below-market rates.
A business line of credit provides revolving access to funds up to a preset limit. For urgent care franchises, a line of credit is invaluable for managing cash flow gaps between insurance reimbursements, covering unexpected equipment repairs, and handling seasonal demand fluctuations. Draws are repaid and the credit becomes available again, making it a flexible ongoing resource.
Dedicated equipment financing products use the medical equipment itself as collateral, which often results in lower interest rates and higher approval rates. For urgent care clinics with significant imaging and diagnostic equipment needs, this can be a cost-effective way to preserve working capital while acquiring the tools the clinic needs to operate.
Merchant cash advances provide immediate capital in exchange for a percentage of future revenue. While they carry higher costs than traditional loans, MCAs can be appropriate for urgent care franchises that need fast capital and have strong, predictable patient volume. They are best used as a short-term bridge rather than long-term financing.
SBA loans represent one of the best long-term financing tools available to urgent care franchise owners. Here is what you need to know about navigating SBA lending for healthcare franchises:
The SBA maintains a Franchise Registry that includes most major franchise brands. When your franchise brand is on the registry, the SBA has already reviewed and approved the franchise agreement, which streamlines the application process significantly. Urgent care brands with established track records benefit considerably from this pre-approval status.
Additionally, the SBA's guarantee (up to 85% for loans under $150,000 and 75% for larger loans) gives lenders confidence to approve borrowers who might not qualify for conventional financing alone. For first-time business owners, those with limited collateral, or operators purchasing their first urgent care location, this government backing can make the difference between approval and denial.
The SBA.gov website provides a comprehensive overview of the 7(a) program requirements and eligible uses. Funds can cover franchise fees, build-out costs, equipment, working capital, and even the acquisition of an existing urgent care location.
SBA loans require thorough documentation and careful preparation. A strong business plan, detailed financial projections, solid personal credit, and ideally some relevant healthcare or business management experience will all strengthen your application. The approval timeline is longer than alternative lending options - plan for 60 to 90 days from application to funding if pursuing the SBA route.
If you need capital faster, SBA loan alternatives through lenders like Crestmont Capital can often be completed in days rather than months, while still providing competitive rates.
Medical equipment is often the single largest capital expense when outfitting an urgent care franchise. Digital X-ray systems alone can cost $50,000 to $150,000. CT scanners, while not standard in most urgent care locations, can exceed $1 million for advanced units. Even standard diagnostic equipment adds up quickly.
Equipment financing and equipment leasing offer two distinct approaches to managing these costs:
With an equipment loan, you borrow the purchase price of the equipment and repay it over a set term, typically 3 to 7 years. The equipment itself serves as collateral. At the end of the term, you own the equipment outright. This works well for long-lived diagnostic equipment that will remain valuable and functional for many years.
Leasing allows you to use equipment without purchasing it outright. Monthly lease payments are typically lower than loan payments for the same equipment, preserving cash flow. At the end of the lease, you can often purchase the equipment at fair market value or upgrade to newer technology. Leasing works particularly well for technology-dependent equipment that may become outdated within 5 to 7 years.
Financing equipment separately from your primary term loan or SBA loan can actually strengthen your overall application. By dedicating specific financing to specific assets, you give each lender cleaner collateral and a clearer repayment source.
Even a well-funded urgent care launch can hit cash flow challenges in the first 12 to 18 months. Insurance billing cycles, credentialing delays (getting approved to accept various insurance plans can take 90 to 180 days), and the natural ramp-up of patient volume all create gaps between expenses and incoming revenue.
Working capital financing is designed to bridge exactly these gaps.
A revolving line of credit is the preferred working capital tool for urgent care franchises. Draw what you need, repay as revenue comes in, and draw again when needed. Lines of credit from $25,000 to $500,000 are commonly available to healthcare operators with at least 12 months in business and reasonable revenue history.
Revenue-based financing advances capital against your anticipated future revenue. Unlike fixed loan payments, repayments flex with your actual collections - you pay more during high-volume periods and less during slower stretches. For urgent care clinics that experience seasonal volume fluctuations (higher in winter cold-and-flu season, for example), this flexibility can be meaningful.
For urgent care franchises with significant insurance receivables, factoring companies will advance 70% to 85% of the value of outstanding claims in exchange for a fee. Once the insurance pays, the factor remits the balance minus their discount. This converts slow-paying insurance receivables into immediate cash without adding traditional debt to your balance sheet.
Crestmont Capital offers working capital solutions with funding in as little as 24-48 hours.
Get Funded FastLenders evaluate urgent care franchise loan applications differently depending on whether you are a startup or an established operator. Here is what each lender category typically looks for:
When there is no existing revenue history to evaluate, lenders focus heavily on:
Once your clinic has operating history, lenders shift their focus to performance metrics:
Suboptimal personal credit does not automatically disqualify you from urgent care franchise financing. Bad credit business loans are available from alternative lenders who weigh revenue, cash flow, and business performance more heavily than credit score alone. Providing collateral, a co-signer, or a larger down payment can also offset credit score concerns.
Understanding what lenders need before you apply allows you to gather documentation efficiently and present the strongest possible application.
Timeline varies significantly by loan type and lender:
If your situation requires fast business loans, alternative lenders can often fund within days rather than weeks.
Experienced healthcare franchise borrowers consistently point to several practices that accelerate approvals and improve loan terms:
Before applying for franchise financing, ensure your business is registered as a legal entity, has an EIN, has established business bank accounts, and has any existing trade lines reporting positively to business credit bureaus. A strong business credit profile, separate from your personal score, opens more doors and typically results in better rates.
Lenders view franchises from large, established brands with documented multi-unit success far more favorably than lesser-known concepts. Choosing a franchise with high brand recognition and strong FDD disclosure data will improve your application at every lender.
A business plan is not just a formality. A thorough, realistic plan that demonstrates market understanding, competitive awareness, and operational acumen meaningfully improves lender confidence. Include demographic analysis of your service area, insurance payor mix projections, staffing plan, marketing strategy, and month-by-month financial projections for year one.
Your personal debt-to-income ratio affects your eligibility for personal guarantees. Paying down consumer debt before submitting franchise loan applications can improve your DTI and increase approved loan amounts.
Lenders who specialize in or have deep experience with healthcare and franchise lending understand your business model, know what metrics to evaluate, and can often structure financing more creatively than generalist lenders. Crestmont Capital has extensive experience financing healthcare businesses across the United States.
Shopping for loans by submitting multiple complete applications to different lenders within a short period can hurt your credit score through multiple hard inquiries. Instead, work with a lender who can evaluate your situation comprehensively before pulling credit.
Sources: Urgent Care Association, SBA.gov, Crestmont Capital internal data
Many urgent care franchise operators begin with a single location and build toward multi-unit ownership as their first clinic achieves stable profitability. Scaling from one to multiple locations introduces new financing dynamics.
Once you have one or two established, profitable locations, lenders view you very differently than they view a first-time applicant. Your existing locations provide revenue history, established payor relationships, and demonstrated management ability. Some lenders will structure portfolio loans against multiple locations simultaneously, allowing you to leverage the equity and revenue across your entire portfolio.
Industry experts generally recommend waiting until your first location achieves 12 to 18 months of consistent profitability before pursuing a second location. This timeline gives you the financial data lenders want and ensures you have the management bandwidth to handle the expansion without compromising the quality of care at your original clinic.
CNBC has reported extensively on how healthcare franchise operators who scale too quickly - before establishing solid operational systems and financial discipline - face outsized failure risk. Patience in the early expansion phase pays dividends in long-term sustainability.
The SBA 7(a) program allows borrowers to hold multiple SBA-guaranteed loans simultaneously, subject to the aggregate $5 million cap on outstanding guaranteed balances. For operators with substantial assets and strong performance history, it is possible to stack SBA financing across multiple locations over time.
One aspect of urgent care franchise financing that is often overlooked is the revenue cycle setup. How quickly your clinic gets credentialed with major insurance carriers directly impacts how quickly you generate billable revenue - and therefore how much working capital you actually need.
Insurance credentialing is the process of getting approved by insurance carriers to see and bill for their members' care. For major commercial insurers, this process typically takes 60 to 120 days. For Medicare and Medicaid, it can take 90 to 180 days. During this window, the clinic can still see patients, but collecting payment requires either cash payment from patients or waiting until credentialing completes to submit claims retroactively (which some but not all carriers allow).
The practical implication: you should have sufficient working capital to cover approximately 4 to 6 months of operating expenses from opening day, even if your patient volume is strong from the start.
Many urgent care franchises outsource their billing and revenue cycle management to specialized third-party services. This reduces staffing requirements but adds a vendor cost. When projecting working capital needs, factor in both the credentialing delay and any billing services fees.
The location you choose for your urgent care franchise affects both your business prospects and your financing options. Lenders do evaluate location quality as part of their underwriting process.
Urgent care franchises in high-visibility retail corridors - strip malls, major intersections, near big-box stores - benefit from walk-in traffic that drives organic patient acquisition. Lenders generally view these locations favorably because the traffic data and retail density support the revenue projections in your business plan.
Approximately 35 states have Certificate of Need (CON) laws that regulate the opening of new healthcare facilities. Depending on how your state defines "urgent care," you may need to obtain a CON before opening. This process can add 6 to 18 months to your pre-opening timeline and should be factored into your financing structure. The Bloomberg Law Health Law Daily has covered the variation in CON requirements across states and the impact on healthcare business development.
The income demographics of your service area will significantly influence your payor mix - the proportion of commercially insured patients versus Medicaid patients versus self-pay patients. Commercially insured patients generate higher reimbursements per visit. Lenders understand this, and markets with higher proportions of commercially insured patients will typically support stronger loan amounts and better terms.
Crestmont Capital understands the unique financing needs of urgent care franchise owners. Our team can help structure the right combination of products for your specific situation.
Start Your ApplicationLabor is typically the largest ongoing operating expense for urgent care franchises, representing 40% to 60% of total operating costs. Physician salaries, nurse practitioner or physician assistant compensation, medical assistant wages, and front desk staffing all add up quickly.
Working capital financing is the primary tool for managing payroll during the startup ramp-up phase. When projecting working capital needs, use actual market wage data for your specific geography. The U.S. Census Bureau's Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program provides reliable wage benchmarks by profession and region.
A single-site urgent care franchise with two exam rooms and basic urgent care services will typically require annual payroll of $600,000 to $900,000 at full operational capacity. Plan accordingly when determining your working capital needs.
Franchise agreements require ongoing royalty payments to the franchisor, typically calculated as a percentage of gross revenue. For urgent care franchises, royalty rates generally range from 5% to 8% of monthly gross revenue, sometimes with a minimum monthly payment floor.
Additionally, most franchise agreements require contributions to a national or regional marketing fund, typically 1% to 3% of gross revenue. These ongoing costs must be factored into your cash flow projections when determining financing needs.
When a lender evaluates your debt service coverage ratio, they will typically deduct royalties and marketing fees from gross revenue before calculating available cash flow for debt service. Make sure your business plan reflects these costs accurately.
While traditional loans dominate urgent care franchise financing, it is worth briefly addressing other funding sources:
The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) offers grant funding to qualifying Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs). Standard commercial urgent care franchises typically do not qualify, but hybrid models serving underserved populations may find HRSA funding relevant. Review SBA.gov and HRSA.gov resources for current grant programs.
Many states offer financing incentives for healthcare businesses opening in medically underserved areas or healthcare professional shortage areas (HPSAs). These programs vary by state and change frequently, but can include reduced-interest loan programs, loan forgiveness provisions, or direct grant funding.
Some urgent care franchise brands maintain relationships with preferred lenders or even operate in-house financing programs. These programs may offer streamlined approval processes based on brand familiarity, but the rates and terms are not always better than market alternatives. Always compare franchisor financing programs against independent options.
Many franchise owners supplement debt financing with personal capital contributions or equity investments from partners or family members. The SBA requires equity injection for most programs - typically 10% to 20% of total project cost must come from the borrower's own resources.
The urgent care franchise sector represents one of the most compelling healthcare business opportunities in the current market. With the right financing partner, the right franchise brand, and a disciplined approach to business planning, building a profitable urgent care franchise is an achievable goal for qualified entrepreneurs.
Crestmont Capital is proud to be a trusted financing partner for healthcare franchise owners across the United States. Our team understands the unique dynamics of urgent care business lending and is committed to helping you access the capital you need on terms that support your long-term success.
For more information about your financing options, explore our resources on small business loans, SBA loans, and equipment financing, or contact our team directly to discuss your specific situation.