A business line of credit gives you flexible, revolving access to funds you can draw, repay, and reuse as your needs change. Unlike a one-time loan, a business line of credit is designed for the rhythm of operations—bridging receivables, stocking inventory, covering payroll timing, or jumping on supplier discounts—while you pay interest only on what you use. This guide explains how a revolving line of credit works, who qualifies, what it costs in 2025, and how to decide on a right-sized working capital line of credit for your company.
A business line of credit is a preset funding limit you can access on demand. You draw what you need, when you need it, then repay as cash returns. As you pay the balance down, the available credit replenishes—so the same facility can support multiple needs across a month or season. That revolving design keeps cash predictable without forcing you into long-term debt for short-term expenses.
After approval, funds can be transferred to your business account when you request a draw. Interest accrues only on the outstanding balance, and many structures allow early repayment without penalty. Because the line refreshes as you repay, you can time draws around real cash inflows—invoice due dates, project milestones, or weekly sales—so carrying costs stay manageable.
Use a line when the need is recurring and short-term, not a single, long-lived purchase. Common examples:
Providers price lines in a few ways. Ask about:
Lenders look for steady operations and clean cash management. Expect to provide:
Add up short-term swings: inventory buys, payroll timing, deposits, and typical receivables gaps. Choose a limit that covers those peaks with modest headroom. Many companies start conservatively, prove performance, and then step up as data accumulates.
Use a term loan for a defined, long-lived purchase—equipment, vehicles, or a build-out—where predictable payments match the asset’s life. Use a line for variable, short-term needs. Most businesses benefit from both: a term schedule for durable assets and a line for operating swings. If asset purchases are on your roadmap, compare options on Berkman’s Equipment Financing page. If your pinch point is slow-paying customers, advancing against receivables via Invoice Financing can complement a line.
A clean, current snapshot of your business shortens turn time:
For a plain-language primer on business credit lines—what they are, how they’re used, and what to compare—the U.S. Small Business Administration offers a helpful overview you can use as a checklist when evaluating terms and fit. See the SBA guide to business lines of credit (one authoritative resource).
Berkman Financial matches capital to your calendar with a concise checklist, transparent scenarios, and predictable reviews—so your line can scale with growth. If receivables timing is the main constraint, we’ll show how a line pairs with Invoice Financing to accelerate cash when big clients pay on net terms. Planning longer-lived purchases? Compare schedules on Equipment Financing so each tool does the job it’s designed for. Explore the program in detail on our Business Line of Credit page.
Will a line affect other financing?
A well-managed line complements term loans or equipment schedules. Keep your funding calendar simple to avoid stacked due dates.
Can I qualify if my credit isn’t perfect?
Underwriting evaluates the whole picture—time in business, bank activity, revenue stability—not just one score.
What does a review involve?
Periodic reviews may request updated statements and financials to confirm that the limit still fits your scale and seasonality.
If flexible access would steady cash flow and protect momentum, a business line of credit can help. Review details on our Business Line of Credit page, compare neighboring tools like Invoice Financing, and contact Berkman Financial to map documentation, a right-sized limit, and a timeline that matches your operations.
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