The Best Merchant Cash Advance Companies for 2026
A merchant cash advance is expensive capital. Picking the right provider is the difference between an advance that solves a real cash-flow problem and one that quietly squeezes your business for the next twelve months. This guide compares the leading MCA companies in the U.S. as of June 2026 — honestly, with their actual factor rates, advance sizes, and qualification minimums, plus an opinion on who each one is genuinely best for.
We have published full provider reviews on every lender on this list (linked below). This page exists to help you narrow from “I need an MCA” to “this is the one I should apply with.”
A note on the numbers. Factor rates, advance sizes, and minimums change frequently and depend heavily on your specific application. Every figure below is sourced from the provider’s own stated criteria as of mid-2026 — always confirm directly with the lender before you sign anything.
How we picked
We track twenty-plus active MCA and revenue-based-financing companies in our MCA directory. For this list we narrowed to providers that meet all of the following:
- Direct lender or established marketplace — not a broker farming your data out to anonymous funders.
- Publishes meaningful pricing information — factor rate ranges, advance ranges, and minimum qualifications you can actually see before you apply.
- 5+ years operating (with a handful of exceptions where the product is clearly differentiated, e.g. Square Capital).
- Active in 2026 — funding new deals, not just servicing old ones.
We then sorted by who each one is realistically the best fit for, rather than ranking them 1-through-10 (which tells you almost nothing if your situation does not match the “#1” pick’s profile).
Quick comparison table
| Provider | Factor rate | Advance size | Min credit | Min revenue | Time in biz | Funding speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OnDeck | 1.10–1.15+ | $5K–$250K | 600+ | $10K/mo | 1+ year | 1–3 days |
| Credibly | 1.11–1.45 | $5K–$400K | 500+ | $15K/mo | 6+ mo | 1–2 days |
| Forward Financing | 1.13–1.28 | $5K–$300K | 500+ | $10K/mo | 6+ mo | 1–2 days |
| Rapid Finance | 1.10–1.50 | $5K–$500K+ | 500+ | $10K/mo | 6+ mo | 24–48 hrs |
| Fora Financial | 1.18–1.48 | $5K–$1.5M | 500+ | $12K/mo | 6+ mo | 2–3 days |
| Uplyft Capital | 1.20–1.40 | $5K–$500K | 500+ | $8K/mo | 6+ mo | 24 hrs |
| Kapitus | 1.10–1.50 | $50K–$5M | 625+ | $20K+/mo | 2+ years | 2–5 days |
| Libertas Funding | 1.05–1.30 | $50K–$5M+ | 630+ | $75K/mo | 2+ years | same-day–2 days |
| Everest Business Funding | 1.20–1.50 | $15K–$2M | 500+ | $15K/mo | 3+ mo | 24–48 hrs |
| National Funding | 1.10+ | $5K–$500K | None stated | $20K+/mo | 6+ mo | 1–3 days |
| Lendio (marketplace) | varies (75+ lenders) | $5K–$5M+ | 550+ | $10K+/mo | 6+ mo | 1–5 days |
| Square Capital | varies (factor ~1.10–1.16) | based on Square sales | n/a | active Square processing | 6+ mo on Square | 1–2 days |
| PayPal Working Capital | flat fee (~1.05–1.18) | based on PayPal sales | n/a | active PayPal processing | 3+ mo on PayPal | minutes–24 hrs |
Numbers above are as of mid-2026 and represent the provider’s advertised ranges. Your actual offer will land somewhere inside that range based on credit, revenue consistency, and industry.
Best for the lowest factor rate: OnDeck
OnDeck is the most established alternative small-business lender in the United States — operating since 2006, publicly traded, and one of the few that consistently advertises starting factor rates of 1.10–1.15. The trade-off is that they want stronger applicants than most of this list: ideally 1+ year in business (2+ preferred), 600+ FICO, and $10K+/month in revenue.
Best for: established businesses with reasonable credit who want the cheapest factor rate they can get on an MCA without going through a marketplace.
Watch-outs: maximum advance is capped at $250,000 (lower than several competitors), and the OnDeck Score underwriting model means a thin credit file with great cash flow may still get a better offer than a thick file with weaker deposits.
Best for credit scores under 600: Credibly and Forward Financing
If your FICO is 500–600, the two providers that consistently quote the most reasonable factor rates in that band are Credibly (starting factor 1.11–1.15 for the strongest sub-prime applicants) and Forward Financing (factor range 1.13–1.28, with most qualified applicants landing 1.18–1.22).
Both are direct lenders, both publish transparent ranges, and both are willing to look past a lower credit score when monthly deposits are consistent.
Best for: small businesses with 6+ months operating history, $10K–$15K+/month in revenue, and a credit profile that has knocked them out of bank consideration.
Watch-outs: even at the low end of these ranges, an MCA is expensive financing. If you can clear a bank or SBA underwriter, do that first — see MCA alternatives.
Best for fastest funding: Rapid Finance and Uplyft Capital
Speed is the most overstated promise in this category — almost every lender claims “24-hour funding” and almost none actually deliver on a first-time application. The two that we see most consistently fund qualified applicants inside 24–48 hours are Rapid Finance (which has funded over $3B since 2005 and built its operation around speed) and Uplyft Capital (which underwrites primarily on bank-statement activity).
Best for: an actual emergency — broken equipment, an unmissable inventory buy, a sudden payroll gap — where the cost of waiting another week is higher than the cost of the spread.
Watch-outs: speed is not free. Both of these typically price toward the higher end of their range on rushed deals. If you can wait three business days, you will usually get a better offer from OnDeck, Credibly, or Forward Financing.
Best for large advances ($500K+): Libertas Funding and Kapitus
Most MCA companies cap out around $250K–$500K. Two providers will reliably underwrite seven-figure deals: Libertas Funding (factor range 1.05–1.30, advances up to $5M+, $2.6B+ funded to date) and Kapitus (factor range 1.10–1.50, advances up to $5M, industry-leading maximum). Fora Financial is a strong third option in the $500K–$1.5M band.
Best for: established businesses ($75K+/month in revenue, 2+ years operating, 625+ FICO) that need a major capital injection — franchise expansion, equipment, acquisition — and either cannot wait for an SBA timeline or do not qualify for one.
Watch-outs: the higher the advance, the more the daily holdback bites. Model the holdback against your worst recent month before you sign — not your best.
Best for very early-stage or low-revenue businesses: Uplyft Capital and Everest Business Funding
If you are barely past the typical 6-month / $10K-revenue minimums, two providers genuinely flex on those numbers: Uplyft Capital (will look at $8K/month) and Everest Business Funding (will look at as little as 3 months in business, with a 95% approval rate on MCA applications).
Best for: thin-file businesses who have been declined elsewhere and genuinely need this capital to grow into qualifying for cheaper financing later.
Watch-outs: factor rates in this lane sit at the top of the range (1.30–1.50 is normal). Be ruthless about whether the use of funds will actually generate enough incremental revenue to cover the cost.
Best if you process through Square: Square Capital
If you take payments through Square, Square Capital will almost always offer you a cheaper advance than an outside MCA. They have your full sales history, the underwriting is automatic, the offer pre-populates in your dashboard, and the holdback comes straight out of Square processing — there is no separate bank-debit relationship to manage.
Best for: any Square seller with 6+ months of consistent processing.
Watch-outs: advance sizes are tied to your Square sales volume specifically — not your total business revenue — which can be limiting if a meaningful share of your sales come through other channels.
Best if you process through PayPal: PayPal Working Capital
Same logic as Square. PayPal Working Capital underwrites based on your PayPal sales history, and the flat-fee structure (no daily compounding — a single fee added to the advance, repaid as a percentage of future PayPal sales) is one of the more transparent products in the category.
Best for: e-commerce businesses where PayPal is a primary payment processor.
Watch-outs: like Square Capital, your offer is capped at what your PayPal sales support — not your total revenue.
Best marketplace (one application, many lenders): Lendio
If you do not already know which lender you want to work with, Lendio is the marketplace we recommend most often. One application gets submitted to a network of 75+ lenders, the offers come back inside 1–3 business days, and you only sign with one — so the credit-pull impact is minimal.
Best for: comparison shopping without filling out the same form ten times.
Watch-outs: marketplace economics mean Lendio has an incentive to route you to whoever pays the highest origination fee — not necessarily who is cheapest for you. Use it to surface offers, but always read the actual contracts side-by-side before signing.
How to actually choose
The decision usually comes down to four numbers about your business and one about the deal:
- Your FICO (500–599 → Credibly / Forward / Uplyft; 600+ → add OnDeck and Kapitus to the list)
- Monthly revenue (under $15K → Uplyft / Square / PayPal; $15K–$75K → most of this list; $75K+ → Libertas / Kapitus open up)
- Time in business (under 1 year → Uplyft / Everest / Square / PayPal; 1+ year → most of the list; 2+ years → all of it)
- How much you need (under $250K → almost any; $250K–$1.5M → Fora / Libertas / Kapitus; $1.5M+ → Libertas / Kapitus only)
- How fast (need it this week → Rapid / Uplyft / Everest; can wait → shop properly with Lendio + 1–2 direct lenders)
Get at least two competing offers in writing before you sign. Factor rates are negotiable, especially if you are bringing a clean file and a competitor’s offer to the table.
Honest tradeoffs before you sign anything
A merchant cash advance is the right product in a narrow set of situations and the wrong one in many more. Before you sign with any lender on this list, make sure none of the following apply:
- You could qualify for a bank or SBA loan. If you can, do that instead — even a high-end bank loan at 12–15% APR is dramatically cheaper than any MCA on this list. See MCA alternatives.
- Your margins are thin. A 15% daily holdback on top of already-tight margins is how MCAs sink otherwise-healthy businesses. Model the daily payment against your worst recent week, not your best.
- You do not have a specific, revenue-generating use for the funds. MCAs work when the money buys inventory you can turn at a profit, equipment that immediately generates revenue, or a contract you cannot otherwise fulfill. They do not work as general working capital filler.
- You are stacking advances. Taking a second MCA while a first is still being repaid is the single fastest way to a debt spiral. Most legitimate lenders will refuse to fund a stacked deal — be very wary of any that will.
If those are all clear, an MCA from a transparent direct lender on this list can be a perfectly reasonable bridge. Just go in with eyes open about what it costs.
Related reading
- How merchant cash advances actually work
- APR vs factor rate, explained
- How to qualify for an MCA
- MCA alternatives (when an advance is the wrong tool)
- The complete guide to merchant cash advances (2026)
- Browse our full MCA directory
Last updated: June 6, 2026. Provider terms and minimums change frequently — always confirm directly with the lender before you apply.