Merchant Cash Advance
A merchant cash advance provides a lump sum repaid through a percentage of future card sales. This guide explains how it works, what it costs, and whether it is the right choice for your business.
A merchant cash advance (MCA) is a financing arrangement where a provider gives a business a lump sum of capital in exchange for a fixed percentage of future card payment sales until an agreed amount has been repaid. It is not technically a loan — it is a purchase of future receivables — which means it operates outside traditional lending regulations.
MCAs are designed for businesses that take a significant proportion of their revenue through card payments, such as retailers, restaurants, pubs, salons, and online shops. The provider connects directly to your merchant account or card terminal to collect repayments automatically.
How a Merchant Cash Advance Works
The Process
- The provider reviews your card payment history (typically 3-12 months of statements)
- Based on your average monthly card turnover, they offer an advance amount and a factor rate
- You receive the lump sum, usually within 2-5 working days
- Repayment happens automatically — the provider takes a fixed percentage of each card transaction (or daily card sales) until the total is repaid
- Once the agreed total is repaid, the arrangement ends
Key Terms
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Advance amount | The lump sum you receive |
| Factor rate | The multiplier applied to the advance (e.g. 1.2x to 1.5x) |
| Total repayable | Advance x factor rate |
| Holdback rate | The percentage of daily card sales taken as repayment (typically 10-30%) |
| Estimated term | The projected repayment period based on your average card turnover |
Example
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Advance | £20,000 |
| Factor rate | 1.3x |
| Total repayable | £26,000 |
| Holdback rate | 15% of daily card sales |
| Average daily card sales | £1,500 |
| Daily repayment (average) | £225 |
| Estimated repayment period | Approximately 116 business days (~5-6 months) |
On a day when card sales are £2,000, the repayment is £300. On a quieter day with £800 in card sales, the repayment is only £120. This flexibility is the core advantage of an MCA.
Costs
MCAs are not priced as an interest rate, making them difficult to compare directly with a traditional business loan . The cost is expressed as a factor rate:
| Factor rate | Advance | Total repayable | Fee |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.15x | £20,000 | £23,000 | £3,000 |
| 1.25x | £20,000 | £25,000 | £5,000 |
| 1.35x | £20,000 | £27,000 | £7,000 |
| 1.50x | £20,000 | £30,000 | £10,000 |
When converted to an equivalent APR, MCAs typically range from 30% to over 100%, depending on the factor rate and repayment speed. This makes them one of the most expensive forms of business finance available.
However, the cost should be weighed against:
- Speed of access — Funds available within days, not weeks
- No fixed monthly payments — Repayments flex with revenue
- No personal guarantee required in most cases
- No security required against property or assets
- High approval rates — Based on card turnover, not credit score alone
Who Qualifies
MCA providers focus on card payment volume rather than traditional lending criteria:
| Criterion | Typical requirement |
|---|---|
| Monthly card turnover | Minimum £5,000 - £10,000 |
| Trading history | At least 4-6 months (some require 12) |
| Card payment proportion | At least 50% of revenue via cards |
| Industry | Retail, hospitality, e-commerce preferred |
| Credit history | Less important than for a bank loan |
Businesses that are declined by banks often turn to MCAs because the approval criteria are different. The provider cares primarily about your card sales volume and consistency, not your personal credit score or net worth.
MCA vs Business Loan
| Feature | Merchant Cash Advance | Business Loan |
|---|---|---|
| Repayment | % of card sales (variable) | Fixed monthly instalments |
| Cost | Factor rate 1.15x-1.5x (high effective APR) | Interest rate 3-12% APR |
| Speed | 2-5 days | 2-6 weeks |
| Security | None | Often required |
| Personal guarantee | Usually not required | Usually required |
| Credit check | Minimal | Full assessment |
| Fixed payments | No | Yes |
| Regulation | Unregulated (not a loan) | FCA-regulated |
| Best for | Fast cash, card-heavy businesses | Planned expenditure, lower cost |
Advantages
- Cash flow friendly — Repayments adjust automatically with sales volume, reducing pressure during quiet periods
- Fast access — Most providers fund within a week
- No collateral — The advance is secured against future card sales, not your assets
- Simple application — Typically requires only card processing statements and basic business information
- No fixed term — If sales are slow, the repayment period extends rather than creating missed payments or penalties
Risks and Drawbacks
- High cost — Effective APRs of 30-100%+ make MCAs significantly more expensive than bank loans or overdrafts
- Daily deductions — The holdback is taken from every day’s card sales, which can affect daily cash flow
- Unregulated — MCAs are not classified as loans and fall outside FCA regulation, meaning fewer consumer protections
- Stacking risk — Taking multiple MCAs simultaneously (from different providers) can lead to unsustainable repayment obligations
- Renewal pressure — Some providers encourage rolling into a new advance before the current one is fully repaid, increasing total costs
- No early repayment saving — The total repayable amount is fixed regardless of how quickly you repay (unlike a loan where early repayment reduces interest)
Accounting Treatment
An MCA is recorded as a financial liability:
When the advance is received:
Debit: Bank £20,000
Credit: MCA liability £20,000
Daily/weekly repayment:
Debit: MCA liability (principal)
Debit: Finance costs (fee portion)
Credit: Bank
The fee (the difference between the advance and the total repayable) should be spread over the expected repayment period as a finance cost. On the balance sheet, the MCA liability is classified as a current liability since it is typically repaid within 12 months.
When an MCA Makes Sense
An MCA can be appropriate when:
- You need capital quickly and cannot wait for a bank loan decision
- Your business has strong, consistent card sales but lacks the credit profile for traditional lending
- The capital will be used for something that generates an immediate return (e.g. stock for a seasonal rush, a marketing campaign, equipment repair)
- You prefer variable repayments that adapt to your trading performance
- Other forms of finance are not available to you
When to Avoid an MCA
- You can access a bank loan or overdraft at a much lower cost
- The capital is for a long-term investment with a slow payback
- Your card sales are declining or unpredictable
- You already have existing MCAs or high levels of debt
- You are considering it purely because it is easy to obtain, without evaluating the true cost
Regulation and Protection
Because an MCA is structured as a purchase of future receivables rather than a loan, it is currently not regulated by the FCA. This means:
- The provider is not required to carry out affordability assessments
- There is no requirement to quote an APR
- The Financial Ombudsman Service may not cover disputes
- Standard consumer credit protections do not apply
The UK government has considered bringing MCAs within the regulatory perimeter, but as of now, borrowers have fewer protections than with regulated lending products. It is important to read the contract carefully and understand the total cost before signing.