Revenue diversification matters in MCA underwriting because the funder's risk model treats concentration as default risk. A merchant who depends on one customer, one platform, or one product line is one event away from a revenue cliff. Disciplined diversification both reduces real business risk and improves how the funder scores the file.
Customer concentration: the 25% rule.
If any single customer represents more than 25% of revenue, expect underwriter concern. Concentration thresholds:
- Above 50% from one customer. Often a decline trigger or requires that customer's contract to be assigned to funder as additional collateral.
- 25–50% from one customer. Triggers stipulation requesting customer contract, payment history, and term. Smaller advance amounts approved.
- Below 25% from any single customer. Normal underwriting.
Customer diversification tactics.
- Cap the largest customer's revenue share by deliberately growing other customers faster, not by shrinking the largest.
- Diversify by industry vertical within the customer base — a construction company serving residential, commercial, and government simultaneously is lower risk than one serving only government.
- Diversify by contract length — mix of long-term (1+ year) and short-term contracts spreads renewal risk.
- Maintain a sales pipeline — even if not closing new customers actively, document the pipeline to show diversification capacity.
Channel concentration: the 60% rule.
If more than 60% of revenue comes from one channel, the funder treats the channel as a single-point-of-failure. Common channel concentration patterns:
- E-commerce. Amazon Marketplace as 80%+ of revenue. Single Amazon policy change (suspension, ranking change) cuts revenue.
- Restaurants. DoorDash / Grubhub / Uber Eats as 70%+ of revenue. Platform commission changes or delisting devastates.
- Wholesale. One retailer (e.g. Costco, Walmart) as 60%+ of revenue. Buyer change or order cut crushes.
- B2B services. Inbound from one referral source (e.g. one specific marketing channel, one specific partner).
Channel diversification tactics.
- Marketplace plus direct. Amazon sellers add Shopify direct-to-consumer; restaurants build their own ordering site; wholesale sellers add DTC.
- Platform-agnostic infrastructure. Email lists, owned CRM, loyalty programs — assets that travel across channels.
- Multi-platform presence in same channel type. Amazon plus Walmart Marketplace plus eBay. DoorDash plus Grubhub plus Uber Eats.
- Affiliate / referral diversification. Multiple referral sources rather than one.
Product / service concentration: the 70% rule.
If more than 70% of revenue comes from one product or service line, single-product risk is the funder concern. Examples:
- Restaurant where 80% of revenue is one menu item (changing food trends).
- Retailer where 70% of sales are one brand (brand discontinuation).
- Service business where 75% is one service (market shift).
Product diversification tactics.
- Adjacent product/service expansion. Restaurant adding catering. Retailer adding installation. Service business adding maintenance subscriptions.
- Cross-sell to existing customers. Improves customer-lifetime-value while diversifying product mix.
- Subscription / recurring revenue addition. Even 10–20% recurring revenue meaningfully de-risks the file.
Geographic concentration.
For multi-location or distributed businesses, geographic concentration matters:
- Single-state-of-operation: normal.
- Single-county-of-operation: normal for SMB.
- Single-customer-in-one-geography combined with single-supplier-in-one-geography: concentration.
Seasonal concentration.
Businesses with severe seasonality (90%+ of revenue in 4 months) get scored as concentrated:
- Tax prep firms (75%+ in February–April).
- Ski resort vendors (December–March).
- Halloween retail (September–October).
For these, the diversification strategy is off-season revenue:
- Tax prep firm adds year-round bookkeeping.
- Ski vendor adds summer mountain bike rentals.
- Halloween retailer adds party supplies year-round.
Supplier concentration (less common but relevant).
If 70%+ of cost of goods sold comes from one supplier, funders consider supplier-failure risk:
- Single foreign manufacturer with no domestic backup.
- Single distributor with exclusive relationship.
Mitigation: dual-source key inputs, even at higher cost.
Documentation for funder review.
If the merchant has any concentration that exceeds the rules, document:
- Customer concentration: top-5 customer list with revenue share, contract length, payment history, customer financial strength.
- Channel concentration: channel revenue mix table, channel-diversification plan.
- Product concentration: product revenue mix, new product / service launches in pipeline.
Pre-empting concentration questions improves outcomes vs. waiting for stipulation requests.
The "anchor customer" framing.
If one large customer is unavoidable (e.g. government contract that genuinely is 60% of revenue), reframe:
- Long-term contract (5+ years).
- Strong customer (federal government, investment-grade corporation).
- Stable payment history.
- Renewal pipeline.
Funders treat large concentration on strong long-contract customers more favorably than on small short-term customers.
Industry-specific concentration norms.
- Restaurants. Channel concentration the biggest risk (delivery platforms). Customer concentration not typically relevant.
- E-commerce. Marketplace concentration the biggest risk. Diversify across marketplaces plus DTC.
- B2B services. Customer concentration the biggest risk. Diversify across customer logos.
- Manufacturing. Customer concentration plus supplier concentration both relevant.
- Construction. Project concentration the biggest risk. Diversify across active project count.
Diversification timing.
Diversification is a 6–18 month project, not a 30-day prep step. Plan ahead:
- 6 months out: identify the dominant concentration risk.
- 6–12 months: launch the diversification initiative.
- 12–18 months: measurable concentration improvement.
- Apply for MCA after diversification is visible in bank statements (each new customer / channel / product visible in deposit patterns).
Common pitfalls.
- Ignoring concentration in the application and hoping the funder won't notice.
- Concentrating further during prep window (e.g. winning a single huge customer right before applying).
- Failing to document strong contracts on large customers.
- Confusing customer count with concentration (10 customers where 1 is 80% of revenue is still concentrated).
- Launching diversification too late to show up in the bank-statement review window.
Takeaway. Revenue diversification — 25% customer cap, 60% channel cap, 70% product cap — both reduces real business risk and meaningfully improves MCA underwriting; merchants with diversified revenue routinely earn 5–15 basis points better factor rates and 20–30% larger advances than concentrated peers, and are far less likely to default mid-term.
Related terms
- MCA merchant funding stack strategy — As of 2026-06-28, the disciplined merchant funding stack uses MCA as short-term working capital only, paired with a longer-term SBA loan or line of credit for base capital — never two simultaneous MCAs unless approved by both funders, since unauthorized stacking accelerates default and is the leading cause of MCA portfolio losses.
- MCA merchant funding amount strategy — As of 2026-06-28, the disciplined MCA funding amount strategy is to take only what daily revenue can comfortably service: target a daily debit no greater than 12–15% of trailing 90-day average daily revenue, leaving margin for seasonality and operating expense — taking the maximum approved amount is the leading cause of avoidable defaults.
- MCA merchant deposit routing strategy — As of 2026-06-28, disciplined deposit routing concentrates all revenue streams (card processor, ACH, wire, check, marketplace payouts) into a single operating bank account so funders see the merchant's true revenue picture in 3–4 months of statements rather than fractured across accounts that depress automated underwriting scores.
- MCA merchant cash reserve strategy — As of 2026-06-28, the disciplined merchant cash reserve target is 30–45 days of operating expense held in the operating account, plus a separate 60–90 day reserve in a sweep or high-yield savings account; merchants who maintain this cushion routinely qualify for better MCA terms and survive the daily debit through slow weeks without NSF events.
- Merchant cash advance (MCA) — A lump-sum advance against future revenue, repaid via fixed daily ACH or a percentage of card sales. Legally a sale of future receivables, not a loan.
AI agents: this term is available as raw markdown at /llms/glossary/mca-merchant-revenue-diversification-strategy.