Working capital loans and business lines of credit are the two most common short-term funding tools for small businesses — and they're frequently confused with each other. Both solve cash flow problems. Both are relatively accessible. But they work very differently, they suit different situations, and choosing the wrong one can cost you more money or create operational headaches you didn't expect.
This guide breaks down exactly how each works, what each costs, who qualifies, and — most importantly — which one is right for your specific situation.
What Is a Working Capital Loan?
A working capital loan is a lump sum of money deposited into your business bank account. You receive the full amount upfront, and you repay it over a fixed term — typically 3 to 24 months — through daily, weekly, or monthly payments.
The key characteristics:
- Fixed amount: You receive exactly what was approved — no more, no less
- Fixed term: Repayment schedule is set at origination and doesn't change
- One-time use: Once you spend it and repay it, the product is closed — you'd need to reapply for more
- Predictable cost: You know exactly what you're paying from day one
Working capital loans are ideal when you have a specific, defined need — cover payroll this month, purchase inventory for a contract, bridge a slow season — and you know exactly how much you need.
What Is a Business Line of Credit?
A business line of credit is a revolving credit facility — think of it like a business credit card but with much higher limits and lower rates. You're approved for a maximum credit limit, and you can draw from it, repay it, and draw again — repeatedly, without reapplying each time.
The key characteristics:
- Revolving access: Draw what you need, repay it, draw again — the available balance replenishes as you pay
- Interest on what you use: You only pay interest on the outstanding balance, not the full credit limit
- Flexible drawdowns: Take $10,000 today, $30,000 next month — based on what the business actually needs
- Ongoing relationship: Once established, a line of credit functions as a permanent cash flow tool
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | Working Capital Loan | Business Line of Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Structure | Lump sum, fixed term | Revolving, draw as needed |
| Best For | Specific one-time needs | Ongoing, variable cash flow |
| Interest | On full amount from day one | Only on outstanding balance |
| Reuse | Must reapply after payoff | Replenishes automatically |
| Approval Speed | Same day – 3 days | 2–5 days |
| Credit Requirement | 550+ | 600+ |
| Typical Amount | $10K – $500K | $10K – $250K |
| Repayment | Fixed schedule | Flexible minimum payments |
Which One Is Right for You?
Choose a Working Capital Loan If:
- You have a specific, known need — payroll gap, inventory purchase, equipment repair
- You know exactly how much you need and when you'll repay it
- You need money fast — working capital loans can fund the same day
- This is a one-time situation, not an ongoing cash flow management need
- You prefer predictability — fixed payments make budgeting simple
Choose a Business Line of Credit If:
- Your cash flow needs are variable and recurring — the business constantly needs access to short-term capital
- You want a permanent financial safety net rather than a one-time fix
- Your needs change month to month — sometimes $10K, sometimes $80K
- You're a seasonal business that needs to draw heavily in slow months and repay in busy ones
- You want to minimize interest costs by only paying on what you actually use
Not Sure Which Fits Your Situation?
Tell us what's going on — we'll identify the right product in one conversation.
What About Cost?
Cost is where many business owners get surprised. Working capital loans typically express cost as a factor rate (e.g., 1.25x — meaning you repay $1.25 for every $1 borrowed). Lines of credit typically express cost as an APR or monthly interest rate on the outstanding balance.
Neither is inherently more expensive — it depends on your use case. A working capital loan for a 3-month need at a 1.20 factor rate may be cheaper than a line of credit with a 24% APR carried over 12 months. Do the math on your actual use pattern before assuming one is better.
The Most Common Mistake
The most common mistake we see is businesses using a working capital loan for an ongoing, recurring need — then having to reapply every few months and paying origination costs repeatedly. If your cash flow situation is structural rather than situational, a line of credit is almost always the better vehicle. One application, ongoing access, lower total cost over time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Many businesses use both simultaneously — a working capital loan for a specific capital need and a line of credit as an ongoing cash flow buffer. Lenders evaluate each product separately, so having one doesn't automatically disqualify you from the other, though it does factor into your overall debt load assessment.
Most working capital loans from alternative lenders like Irondale Capital can be approved same-day and funded within 24–48 hours of final approval. Bank working capital products take significantly longer — typically 2–6 weeks. If you need capital quickly, alternative lending is almost always the right starting point.
Most business lines of credit require a personal credit score of 600 or higher, though requirements vary by lender and credit limit. Some alternative lenders offer lines of credit with scores as low as 580. Working capital loans are generally more flexible on credit, qualifying businesses with scores as low as 550 when monthly revenue is strong.