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Glossary · MCA funder policy: acquisition-stage businesses

MCA funder policy: acquisition-stage businesses

Acquisition-stage businesses (closing or recently closed on buying another business) face MCA decline at most mainstream funders; SBA 7(a) acquisition loans, seller financing, and asset-based lenders are structurally better-fit.

By Keerthana Keti5 min read

Definition. An acquisition-stage business in MCA underwriting context is one actively negotiating to purchase another business, in the closing process, or within 90 days post-close of an acquisition. This includes small-business roll-ups, owner-operator buyouts, partner buyouts, family-business succession purchases, and individual entrepreneurs buying their first business.

Why mainstream MCA funders decline acquisition-stage businesses.

Acquisition events disrupt the underwriting profile: 1. Revenue history attribution. The acquired business's revenue history belongs to the prior owner legally; new owner has no operating history at the entity. 2. Cap-table change. New ownership triggers underwriting re-evaluation; many funders require 6-12 months operating under new ownership. 3. Personal-guarantee transition. New owner's personal credit, assets, and PG strength differ from prior owner. 4. Bank-statement reset. New bank accounts under new EIN reset trailing-month history; old accounts may close. 5. SBA 7(a) overlap concern. Acquisition financing typically uses SBA 7(a); funders avoid being subordinate to fresh SBA debt. 6. Operational risk. New owner may not yet have demonstrated competence operating the acquired business. 7. Earn-out / seller-note complexity. Acquisition structures often include earn-outs and seller notes that complicate the capital stack.

Mainstream MCA funder policy.

  • Auto-decline at most A-paper funders during transition. Most funders require 6+ months of trailing bank statements at the new entity / new ownership before considering.
  • Asset-purchase vs stock-purchase treatment. Stock-purchase acquisitions (preserving the entity) allow some funders to accept prior-ownership bank history; asset-purchases (new entity) reset history.
  • Roll-up / serial acquirer exception. Funders working with established roll-up operators (5+ prior acquisitions, $5M+ combined revenue) may approve during acquisition.
  • Bridge-financing decline. Mainstream funders typically decline MCA used to fund the down payment on acquisition; SBA 7(a) and seller notes are the appropriate instruments.

Pricing matrix for acquisition-stage businesses.

  • Post-acquisition 90+ days, strong unified history: 1.25-1.35 factor, 6-12 month term — depending on combined cash flow and credit.
  • Post-acquisition 30-90 days, unified history pending: 1.35-1.45 factor, 4-9 month term — limited funder availability.
  • Acquisition in progress, pre-close: Most funders decline; specialty bridge lenders only.
  • Asset-purchase, new entity: Typically wait 6+ months for any MCA consideration.

Documentation requirements for post-acquisition MCA.

  • 12+ months trailing bank statements at acquired business (under prior ownership).
  • 90+ days bank statements under new ownership (preferred 6+ months).
  • Purchase agreement and closing documents.
  • SBA 7(a) loan documentation (if applicable).
  • New owner personal credit + 2 years personal tax returns.
  • Buyer business plan for first 12-24 months.
  • Working-capital projection.

What acquisition-stage businesses should pursue instead.

  1. SBA 7(a) acquisition loan. Up to $5M, 10-year term, ~10-12% APR in 2026. Designed precisely for business acquisitions; can include working capital component.
  2. SBA 7(a) Small Loan. Up to $500K, faster approval (45-60 days), for smaller acquisitions.
  3. Seller financing. 20-40% of purchase price commonly carried by seller at 6-10% interest. Negotiable and often the easiest term.
  4. Earn-out structure. Performance-based payments reduce down payment requirement.
  5. SBA Express. Up to $500K, 30-45 day approval; appropriate for smaller acquisitions or working capital post-close.
  6. Asset-based lending. If acquired business has substantial AR, inventory, or equipment, ABL provides immediate working capital.
  7. Equipment financing. Equipment-backed acquisitions can finance the equipment portion separately at 7-12% APR.
  8. CDFI acquisition lending. Some CDFIs specialize in succession financing for diverse-owner acquisitions.

Strategic considerations for acquisition financing.

  1. Do NOT use MCA for down payment. SBA 7(a) requires the down payment to come from non-borrowed sources; MCA-funded down payment violates SBA rules and risks loan denial.
  2. Plan working-capital separately. Acquisition financing rarely covers post-close working capital. Plan SBA Express line of credit, asset-based credit, or equity for working capital BEFORE close.
  3. Negotiate seller working-capital adjustments. Many acquisition agreements include working-capital true-up at close; favorable structure reduces post-close cash strain.
  4. Build banking relationships pre-close. Establish relationships with target's existing bank during diligence; smooth post-close credit access.
  5. Document operational continuity. Retain key employees, customer relationships, and vendor relationships; lender confidence depends on continuity.

Specialty acquisition-stage lenders.

  • Live Oak Bank. SBA 7(a) acquisition specialist; industry verticals include dental, veterinary, healthcare.
  • Newtek Business Services. SBA 7(a) lender with strong acquisition financing track record.
  • Huntington National Bank. SBA 7(a) acquisition lender; midwest concentration.
  • Pursuit Lending. CDFI for NY/NJ/PA acquisitions.
  • CIBC US. SBA 7(a) for larger acquisitions.

Common confusion. First, "MCA can fund my acquisition down payment" — false; this violates SBA rules and triggers loan denial. Second, "Post-close I can immediately get MCA" — usually false; most funders require 90-180 days post-close. Third, "Buying a business with cash flow means MCA is easy" — false; the entity / ownership change triggers underwriting reset regardless of cash flow.

As of 2026-06-29, Fundnode pre-screens acquisition-stage applicants for SBA 7(a), seller financing, and asset-based lending alternatives — none of which require MCA pricing. When post-close working capital is needed and SBA Express timing is too slow, Fundnode matches to specialty post-acquisition MCA funders with clear documentation of the new-ownership operating history.

Related terms

  • MCA funder policy: exit-stage businessesExit-stage businesses (preparing for sale within 6-18 months) should generally avoid MCA because daily debits depress trailing-twelve-month EBITDA used in valuation; specialty bridge lenders and seller-note structures fit better.
  • SBA 7(a) loanSBA 7(a) is the most common small business loan — federally-guaranteed term loans up to $5M from approved SBA lenders. APR prime + 2.75-4.75% (8-12% in 2026). 25-year max term for real estate, 10-year for working capital. Takes 30-90 days but cheapest non-personal-credit option.
  • MCA funder policy: family businessesFamily businesses (multi-generational ownership, multiple family members involved in operations) get standard A-paper underwriting based on financial fundamentals; family-specific complications include succession planning, multiple PGs, and family-conflict disclosure.
  • Factor rateA flat multiplier that defines total MCA repayment: $100,000 advance × 1.30 factor = $130,000 repaid. It is not an interest rate; it does not compound.

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