What are the best loan options for a consulting firm?

Consulting firms most often finance through business lines of credit backed by retainer or project revenue, SBA Microloans for early-stage working capital, and SBA 7(a) for firm acquisitions or large team expansion. Recurring retainer contracts are the strongest underwriting signal — structure billing as monthly retainers rather than project invoices wherever possible to improve loan readiness.

How consulting firms generate fundable revenue

Consulting firms (NAICS 541611 — Administrative Management and General Management Consulting Services, or 541613 — Marketing Consulting Services, among others) generate revenue through monthly retainers, project fees, and time-and-materials billing. Retainer revenue is recurring and predictable — the strongest loan signal. Project-based revenue is lumpier and less consistent but still documentable. The most common financing challenge for consultants is the timing gap: a large project engagement requires upfront staffing and delivery costs weeks before the client invoice settles.

Business line of credit: the core consulting finance tool

A revolving line of credit lets a consulting firm draw to cover payroll, contractor fees, and pre-delivery project costs, then repay from client invoice settlements. Lenders require 640+ personal FICO, 12+ months of documented revenue in a business bank account, and $5,000+ average monthly deposits. Lines range from $25,000 to $500,000 for established consulting practices. Retainer clients make the application stronger — if you have 3+ clients on monthly retainers that collectively clear $15,000+/month in the business account, lenders can project debt service coverage confidently.

SBA Microloan for early-stage consulting businesses

The SBA Microloan program provides up to $50,000 through nonprofit CDFI intermediaries at 8–13% APR — the most accessible path for consulting firms under two years old or those making initial technology and infrastructure investments. Eligible uses include CRM software, project management tools, initial marketing, and working capital. CDFI underwriters evaluate domain expertise, client pipeline, and business viability alongside FICO — a strong fit for credentialed consultants launching an independent practice.

SBA 7(a) for firm acquisition or expansion

The SBA 7(a) program provides up to $5 million at prime + 2.75–3.25% for qualified borrowers. Acquiring a competing consultancy, buying out a partner, or funding a major practice expansion (new vertical, new geography, significant team growth) are all well-matched SBA 7(a) use cases. Requirements: 2+ years operating history, 680+ personal FICO, positive cash flow, and a business plan showing client retention metrics and revenue stability.

How to strengthen a consulting loan application

Structure billing as monthly retainers wherever possible — invoice monthly for ongoing advisory relationships rather than project completion. Keep all client payments in a dedicated business checking account. Prepare signed engagement letters or statements of work alongside bank statements. If the firm operates as a sole proprietorship, a Schedule C from the most recent tax return supplements bank statements; converting to an LLC or S-Corp before applying a larger facility presents a cleaner business credit profile to lenders.

Apply at ClearValue Lending

Start your application at Find my match. Your file routes to ONE matched lender based on NAICS classification, retainer revenue documentation, and financing purpose. ClearValue Lending is a funding platform, not a lender or financial advisor.

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