Skip to main content

What Is a Business Line of Credit?

You have payroll due Friday and a big customer who pays in 45 days. You do not need a lump sum loan sitting in your account collecting interest. You need cash you can pull when you need it and pay back when the money comes in. That is exactly what a business line of credit does.

Last updated · Reviewed by Cody Dreis

50+ Lenders|Funding in as little as 24 hours

See Business Line of Credit offers you qualify for, free.

One 10-minute application. Matched to 3–7 best-fit lenders from a 50+ network. Decisions in 24–48 hours.

What a Business Line of Credit Is

A business line of credit is a set amount of money a lender approves you to borrow against, on demand, up to a fixed limit. Think of it like a credit card built for business cash flow, but usually with lower rates and higher limits.

You only pay interest on the amount you actually draw, not the full limit. When you pay it back, that money becomes available to borrow again. This is called a revolving line, and it is the feature that makes it so useful for businesses with uneven cash flow.

How a Business Line of Credit Works

A lender approves you for a credit limit, say $75,000. You draw what you need, when you need it. Interest starts only on the drawn amount. As you repay principal, your available credit refills.

Here is a concrete example. You draw $20,000 to cover an inventory order. You pay interest only on that $20,000, not on the full $75,000 limit. Two months later your customer pays you, you repay the $20,000, and your full limit is available again for the next gap.

Lines come as revolving (refills as you repay) or non-revolving (a one-time limit that does not refill). Most short-term working capital lines are revolving. Repayment is typically monthly, and many lines carry a draw period followed by a repayment period.

What You Can Use a Business Line of Credit For

A line of credit is built for timing gaps and short-term needs, not for long-term assets. Common uses:

Covering payroll: when receivables are slow.

Buying inventory: ahead of a busy season.

Bridging the gap: between paying suppliers and getting paid by customers.

Handling surprise expenses: like an equipment repair or a tax bill.

Taking on a bigger order: you could not fund out of pocket.

If you are buying a long-term asset like a building or a major piece of machinery, a line of credit is the wrong tool. Match the financing term to the life of what you are funding.

Requirements and How to Qualify

Lenders weigh time in business, revenue, and credit. Honest ranges:

Time in business: Most lenders want at least 6 months to 2 years. Stronger, lower-cost lines usually require 2+ years.

Annual revenue: Often $100,000 or more, though some online lenders go lower.

Credit score: Bank lines typically want 680+. Online lenders may approve scores in the 600s at higher rates.

Collateral: Some lines are unsecured. Larger or lower-rate lines may be secured by business assets.

Common documents: 3 to 6 months of business bank statements, 1 to 2 years of business tax returns, a P&L and balance sheet when applicable, government ID, business entity documents, and a voided business check.

What a Business Line of Credit Costs: Rates, Terms, and Fees

Pricing depends heavily on whether you qualify for a bank line or an online line. Rates move with the market, so treat these as current ranges, not promises.

Bank or well-qualified lines: roughly 7% to 13%.

Online lines: 15% to 50%+, depending on credit, revenue, and time in business.

For context, the U.S. Prime rate sits at 6.75% as of June 2026, and many bank lines are priced as Prime plus a margin. Watch for structure beyond the headline rate: some lines carry draw fees, monthly maintenance fees, or annual fees. A good broker shows you the full cost before you commit.

Pros and Cons

You pay interest only on what you draw.

It refills as you repay, so it is there for the next gap.

It is far cheaper than most high-cost short-term options when you qualify.

Variable rates can rise if the market moves.

Discipline matters: an always-tapped line becomes expensive permanent debt.

Limits may be lower than a term loan for the same business.

Who a Business Line of Credit is Best for (and Who Should Look Elsewhere)

A line of credit is best for established businesses with recurring, predictable cash flow gaps. If you invoice customers and wait to get paid, or your sales swing with the seasons, a line is one of the most flexible tools you can hold.

Look elsewhere if you need a large one-time lump sum for a specific purchase. A term loan or equipment financing usually fits better and costs less over the life of a fixed asset. If you have been in business under 6 months, you may need to build more history first.

How to Get a Business Line of Credit Through Quordx

Quordx Capital is a funding brokerage, not a lender, and it is free to you, always. There is no application, broker, or processing fee. Quordx Capital is paid a commission by the lender.

You apply online in about 10 minutes. Quordx Capital reads your profile and matches you to 3 to 7 best-fit lenders from a network of 50+ vetted lenders, then submits your package on your behalf. Lender decisions typically come back in 24 to 48 hours, and funding can land in as little as 3 to 7 business days. Quordx Capital serves SMBs in 46 states.

Frequently Asked Questions

How fast can I get a line of credit?: You apply online in about 10 minutes. Most lenders decide in 24 to 48 hours, with funding in as little as 3 to 7 business days once approved.

Does it cost anything to use Quordx Capital?: No. Quordx Capital is free to borrowers, always. No application, broker, or processing fees. The lender pays Quordx Capital a commission.

How much can I borrow?: Limits vary widely by business, from a few thousand dollars to several hundred thousand or more, based on your revenue, credit, and time in business.

Do I pay interest on the whole limit?: No. You pay interest only on the amount you actually draw, not the full approved limit.

What if my credit is not perfect?: You may still qualify, often through an online lender at a higher rate. Quordx Capital matches you to lenders that fit your actual profile.

A business line of credit is the most flexible cash tool most businesses can hold: borrow what you need, pay interest only on what you draw, and refill as you repay. The smartest move is matching to a lender that fits your real numbers. Apply online in about 10 minutes and let Quordx Capital find the fit.

Apply for Funding

No obligation · Takes about 10 minutes

Apply for Funding

No obligation · Initial inquiry doesn't impact credit · Takes about 10 minutes

Cody Dreis, Founder, Quordx Capital

Written by

Cody Dreis

Founder, Quordx Capital

Read full bio

More on this topic from the Quordx Capital library.

Important Disclosures

Quordx Capital is a business funding broker, not a lender. We facilitate introductions between U.S. small and medium-sized businesses and lenders or capital providers in our network. All credit decisions, funding amounts, rates, fees, repayment terms, and timelines are determined solely by individual lenders based on their own underwriting criteria.

Funding figures and timelines shown on this page are illustrative and represent ranges within our lender network, they are not guarantees and individual outcomes may vary based on business profile, industry, time in business, revenue, credit history, and lender availability. Not all applicants qualify for every product.

The initial inquiry does not impact your personal credit score. Some lenders may perform a hard credit pull during underwriting; Quordx only authorizes such checks with your specific consent for the lender presenting an offer. Applicants are protected under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) from discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, age, or because all or part of an applicant's income derives from any public-assistance program.

This Site is intended for commercial, business-purpose financing for U.S. businesses only. Not available for consumer loans, residential mortgages, or owner-occupied real estate. Quordx may receive compensation from lenders when applications result in funded transactions. This does not change the rate, fee, or terms offered to you. See our Advertiser Disclosure for details.

By submitting an application or contact information, you consent to be contacted by Quordx and its lending partners via phone, text, and email, including by automated means, regarding your funding inquiry. Consent is not a condition of receiving funding. Message and data rates may apply. Reply STOP to opt out. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.