Freelancers operating as an LLC or sole proprietorship qualify for business lines of credit, SBA Microloans, and equipment financing using business bank statements and Schedule C income. Your file routes to ONE matched lender — based on your NAICS code, income documentation, and financing purpose.
Freelancers are self-employed business owners, not employees — which means lenders evaluate income differently. Instead of W-2s, underwriters look at Schedule C (net profit from self-employment) on personal tax returns, business bank statements showing recurring deposits, and 1099-NEC or 1099-K forms from clients and platforms. The biggest underwriting challenge is that Schedule C net income after deductions is often lower than gross revenue — lenders use net income for DSCR calculations, so aggressive deductions reduce qualifying income. Maintaining a separate business bank account with consistent, identifiable deposits is the single most important documentation step for any freelancer seeking financing.
The most common cash-flow problem for freelancers is the gap between completing work and receiving payment — net-30, net-45, or net-60 client payment terms create regular shortfalls. A revolving business line of credit draws to cover operating expenses and personal draw while invoices are outstanding, then repays when client payments clear. Lines from $10K–$100K are available to freelancers with 1+ year of documented business income and 640+ personal FICO. Interest accrues only on drawn balances.
The SBA Microloan program provides up to $50,000 through nonprofit CDFI intermediaries — the most accessible structured loan for freelancers who are early in business or have limited credit history. Microloans fund equipment purchases (cameras, computers, audio gear, software), working capital, and startup costs. CDFI intermediaries apply mission-driven underwriting that weights demonstrated repayment capacity and business viability alongside FICO — making Microloans accessible to sole proprietors the conventional banking channel underserves. Rates run 8–13% APR; terms up to 6 years.
Freelancers in photography, video production, graphic design, audio engineering, and similar fields regularly invest in expensive professional equipment. Equipment financing uses the asset as collateral, which reduces the credit requirements compared to unsecured loans. IRS Publication 946 Section 179 permits first-year expensing of qualifying business equipment — a significant tax offset for freelancers making large tool purchases. Equipment loans run 24–72 months, with terms matched to the expected useful life of the asset.
Conventional lines of credit: 640+ personal FICO, 1+ year in business, $5K+ average monthly gross deposits in the business account. SBA Microloan: credit standards vary by intermediary — some lend at sub-600 FICO with a viable business plan and demonstrated revenue. Equipment financing: 600+ FICO, asset acts as collateral. Registering as an LLC and opening a dedicated business bank account strengthens every application — it separates business income from personal deposits and creates a cleaner underwriting picture.
Start your application. Your file routes to ONE matched lender — matched to your NAICS classification, income documentation, and financing purpose. ClearValue Lending is a funding platform, not a lender or financial advisor.