Construction companies have some of the most complex cash flow profiles of any industry — and banks are uniquely bad at understanding them. Variable project timelines, front-loaded costs, delayed receivables, equipment-intensive operations, and seasonal revenue cycles all combine to make conventional bank financing a poor fit for most contractors.

This guide covers why banks consistently decline construction companies, which capital products actually work for the industry, and how to position your business to access the funding you need.

Why Banks Say No to Construction Companies

Understanding why banks decline construction companies helps you stop wasting time on applications that were never going to work:

The problem isn't that construction companies are bad borrowers. The problem is that bank underwriting was designed for businesses with predictable, W-2-style cash flow — which construction fundamentally isn't.

Capital Products That Actually Work for Construction

Working Capital Loans

Fast, flexible, and accessible — working capital loans are often the first and best tool for construction companies that need to mobilize on a project, cover payroll between receivables, or purchase materials before a contract payment clears. Approval is based on bank statements, not tax returns — which means your real revenue is what gets evaluated.

Equipment Financing

Equipment financing is purpose-built for construction. The equipment itself serves as collateral, which means approval odds are higher and rates are typically better than unsecured products. Whether you need excavators, trucks, compactors, or lifts — equipment financing lets you add capacity without depleting working capital.

Invoice Factoring

If you're a contractor with outstanding invoices from creditworthy clients — municipalities, general contractors, large developers — invoice factoring converts those receivables into immediate cash. You don't wait 60–90 days for payment. The factor advances 70–90% of the invoice immediately and remits the balance (minus a fee) when your client pays. No credit check of the contractor required — qualification is based on your clients' creditworthiness.

Bridge Loans

Bridge loans cover the gap between when you need capital and when a longer-term funding source is available. For construction companies, this commonly means bridging between contract signing and payment milestones, or between winning a bid and receiving mobilization funds.

Ground-Up Construction Financing

For developers and builders, ground-up construction financing funds the project itself — land acquisition, site preparation, vertical construction — through a draw schedule tied to construction milestones. This is specialized lending that requires lenders who understand construction timelines and have experience with draw inspection processes.

How to Position Your Construction Business for Approval

Real Example: How Irondale Capital Helped a Construction Company

QAYAQ Construction had a time-sensitive contract opportunity that required immediate mobilization — equipment deployment, material purchasing, and payroll coverage before the first milestone payment. Their bank couldn't move fast enough. Irondale Capital reviewed their bank statements, understood the contract structure, and deployed a working capital solution within 48 hours. The company mobilized on the contract and completed the project successfully.

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Industries We Serve in Construction & Trades

Irondale Capital works with the full range of construction and trades businesses:

Frequently Asked Questions

In many cases, yes. Signed contracts with creditworthy clients (municipalities, large developers, general contractors) can be used to support financing, particularly through invoice factoring or specific contract-based working capital products. The strength of the contract and the creditworthiness of the contracting party matter significantly. Tell us about your contract and we'll identify the best path.

Working capital products can fund within 24–48 hours of approval. Equipment financing typically takes 3–7 days. Ground-up construction loans and larger real estate products take longer — 2–4 weeks depending on complexity. If you have a time-sensitive contract window, lead with that urgency and we'll route you to the fastest appropriate product.

No. Most alternative lending products for construction companies evaluate primarily on revenue and bank statement performance. Working capital and revenue-based products are available with credit scores as low as 550. Equipment financing can often be arranged with scores as low as 580 because the equipment itself provides collateral. Apply and we'll match you to the programs that fit your actual profile.