manu // freight-brokerage
Freight Brokerage
Business Loans
A comprehensive guide to financing for U.S. freight brokerage businesses: from surety bonds and technology to working capital and SBA loans. Compare options, understand qualifications, and apply through one application to 75+ lenders.
National Business Capital network figures.
Summary
- Freight brokerage financing covers SBA loans, working capital for carrier payments, technology financing, lines of credit, and accounts receivable financing.
- The right loan depends on whether you need operating capital to pay carriers, technology and surety bond coverage, or capital to add agents and expand lanes.
- Freight brokers benefit from accounts receivable as collateral: invoices from creditworthy shippers can secure factoring and receivables financing.
- One application through the NBC network reaches 75+ lenders, so you compare offers instead of applying to banks one at a time. No hard credit pull to pre-qualify.
Advertiser Disclosure: Manu Business Lending is a paid referral partner of National Business Capital. Financing is provided by NBC and its lender network, not by Manu. All loans subject to lender approval, terms, and conditions.
Best Options by Situation
Not every financing tool fits every freight brokerage situation. Use this table to find the right option based on what you need the money for.
| Situation | Best financing type | Runner-up | Key tradeoff |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paying carriers before shippers pay | Equipment financing | SBA 7(a) | Speed vs. cost: equipment loans fund faster; SBA loans are cheaper but slower |
| Covering materials and payroll | Business line of credit | Working capital term loan | Lines are revolving and flexible; term loans are lump-sum |
| Bridging carrier-to-shipper payment gaps | Invoice factoring | Asset-based lending | Requires creditworthy B2B clients on net terms |
| Adding agents and expanding lanes | Working capital term loan | Business line of credit | Lump-sum for defined project scope vs. revolving flexibility |
| Expanding or adding a location | SBA 504 or SBA 7(a) | Bank term loan | Lowest cost but longest timeline (60-90+ days) |
| Startup with signed contracts | Equipment financing | Working capital | Asset and contract value matter more than business history |
| Bad credit but strong equipment | Equipment financing or invoice factoring | Asset-based lending | Underwriting focuses on asset quality, not owner credit |
What Is a Freight Brokerage Business Loan?
Freight brokerage business loans are financing products designed for the specific capital needs of asset-light logistics operations. That includes paying carriers before shippers pay you, covering surety bonds, brokerage software, and operating overhead, bridging the gap between when you pay the carrier and when the shipper pays your invoice, or adding agents and expanding into new lanes.
The types of financing covered here may be used by a wide range of freight brokerage operations: freight brokers and 3PLs managing carrier networks, asset-light carriers using dispatch technology, dispatch services handling load booking, and logistics and supply chain consultants.
Most freight brokerage financing falls into one of two categories: cash-flow-based financing, where the lender underwrites based on the business revenue, shipper credit, and ability to repay, and accounts receivable financing, where unpaid shipper invoices serve as collateral. Understanding which category you are working in matters because it shapes what type of financing is the best fit, how fast you can get funded, and what it will cost.
Why Freight Brokerage Financing Is Different
Freight brokers face a uniquely challenging cash flow cycle: you must pay the carrier within 15 to 30 days of delivery, but the shipper may not pay your invoice for 30 to 60 days. This means you are funding the gap between carrier payment and shipper payment on every single load. A broker moving 50 loads per week at an average of $1,500 each must float $75,000 in carrier payments at any given time. This gap grows proportionally with volume, meaning success actually accelerates the cash flow problem.
For small and growing freight brokerages, this creates intense pressure when scaling. Adding a new agent or expanding into a new lane immediately increases the number of loads, which increases the carrier payment float requirement. Surety bonds (minimum $75,000 for FMCSA authority) must be maintained. Technology investments in TMS systems and load boards are essential for competitiveness. That is why the right financing tool for a freight brokerage may not be the same one that works for a business with standard payment cycles.
Freight brokers do have an advantage: creditworthy receivables. Shipper invoices, especially from established corporations and manufacturers, are high-quality collateral that lenders can finance through factoring or accounts receivable lines. The broker does not need hard assets to secure financing, because the invoices themselves serve as collateral. This means freight brokers often have access to financing options, such as invoice factoring and receivables-backed lines of credit, that are specifically designed for their cash flow cycle.
Financing Options Compared
Below are the main types of financing available to freight brokerage businesses. For each, consider three core tradeoffs: cost (lower rate usually means more documentation and time), speed (faster funding typically costs more), and flexibility (how freely you can use the funds).
One application through the NBC network returns matched offers across these products, so you compare instead of guessing.
Equipment Loan vs. Equipment Lease
| Equipment Loan | Equipment Lease | |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership | You own the equipment | Lessor retains ownership during lease |
| Best for | Long-term use, building equity | Preserving cash, short useful life, frequent upgrades |
| Down payment | Typically 20% or more | Often lower or none |
| Watch out for | Total interest cost over term; equipment obsolescence | Residual purchase options; end-of-lease terms |
Invoice Financing vs. Invoice Factoring
| Invoice Financing (A/R Lending) | Invoice Factoring | |
|---|---|---|
| Who collects | You collect from your customers | The factor collects from your customers |
| Speed | Fast, often 24 hours | Fast, often 24 hours |
| Advance rate | Typically 80-90% of invoice value | Typically 85-90% of invoice value |
| Best for | Businesses that want to maintain customer relationships | Businesses that want to outsource collections |
| Watch out for | Interest accrues until customer pays | Customer notification; some customers react poorly |
One application. 75+ lenders. No hard credit pull to pre-qualify.
Get Pre-QualifiedHow to Qualify for Freight Brokerage Loans
Qualifications depend heavily on the type of financing. Here is what each category typically requires:
| Financing type | What matters most | Credit requirements |
|---|---|---|
| SBA and bank loans | Strong financials, good credit, sufficient collateral, clear use of proceeds | Typically 680+ personal credit |
| Equipment financing | Cash flow and receivables value; the asset secures the loan | Flexible; asset value can offset weaker credit |
| Invoice factoring | Creditworthiness of your customers (not yours); invoice aging; customer concentration | Often not required or evaluated flexibly |
| Lines of credit | Revenue consistency, time in business, cash flow | Good credit helpful but not always required |
| Purchase order financing | Customer creditworthiness, order margins, fulfillment process | Customer credit matters more than yours |
| Short-term online loans | Revenue, bank statement deposits, time in business | Good personal credit; bank statements reviewed |
Strong carrier relationships or steady freight volume can carry a deal that credit alone would not.
How Much Can You Borrow?
Loan amounts vary widely depending on the financing type and your business qualifications:
| Financing type | Typical range | What determines the amount |
|---|---|---|
| SBA 7(a) | Up to $5 million | Cash flow, collateral, use of proceeds |
| SBA 504 | Up to $5.5 million per project | Project cost, asset value, borrower equity injection |
| Equipment financing | $10K to $5M+ | Equipment purchase price and appraised value |
| Business line of credit | $10K to $5M | Revenue, cash flow, time in business |
| Invoice factoring | Based on receivables volume | Invoice value, customer creditworthiness |
| Purchase order financing | Order-based | PO value, customer credit, profit margins |
| Term loans (NBC network) | $10K to $15M | Revenue, credit profile, use of proceeds |
| Merchant cash advance | Sales-based | Monthly card sales volume |
Documents You Need to Apply
Being prepared with the right documentation before you start the application process can significantly reduce your time to funding and improve your chances of approval.
| Document | Who provides it | Why it matters | How recent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Business tax returns | You / accountant | Primary proof of income and profitability | 3 most recent years |
| Year-to-date financials | You / accountant | Shows current performance | Within 60-90 days |
| Balance sheet | You / accountant | Shows assets, liabilities, and net worth | Current |
| Business bank statements | Your bank | Verifies cash flow and revenue | 3-6 months |
| Debt schedule | You / accountant | Lists all outstanding business debt | Current |
| A/R aging report | You | Shows quality and age of outstanding invoices | Current |
| Equipment quotes | Vendor | Documents the asset being financed | Current quote |
| Contracts or purchase orders | You / customers | Confirms future revenue | Active |
| Personal financial statements | Each owner (20%+ stake) | Required for personal guarantee evaluation | Most recent year |
Pre-qualification through the NBC network only requires basic business details and recent bank statements. Full underwriting documents are requested after you select an offer.
How to Apply for Freight Brokerage Financing
- Define your goal. Get specific about what you need: equipment, cash flow gap, project fulfillment, or expansion. The use of proceeds determines which financing type is the right fit.
- Choose your likely financing type. Match your use case to the options above using the Best Options by Situation table. If cost is the priority and you can wait, consider SBA. If speed is critical, look at equipment financing or invoice factoring.
- Gather your documents. Pull bank statements, financial statements, and your debt schedule before you apply. Being prepared accelerates the process significantly.
- Submit one application. Through the NBC network, one application reaches 75+ lenders. No hard credit pull to pre-qualify, so checking your options does not affect your credit.
- Compare matched offers. Review the APR, total cost, and repayment schedule across competing offers. Understand fees, not just the interest rate. Ask questions if anything is unclear.
- Close and get funded. Once you select an offer, the lender may request full underwriting documents. Respond promptly. Equipment and short-term deals can fund in days; SBA loans take 60-90+ days.
Compare offers from 75+ lenders with one application. No hard credit pull.
Get Pre-QualifiedAlternatives to Freight Brokerage Loans
Loans are not the only way to fund a freight brokerage business. Depending on your situation, these alternatives may be worth exploring:
| Alternative | Best for | Upside | Downside |
|---|---|---|---|
| Supplier trade credit | Ongoing materials purchasing | Effectively 0% interest if paid on time; may build business credit | Requires supplier relationship; late payments damage credit |
| Business credit cards | Small, recurring purchases | Convenience, float, rewards, builds business credit | High rates if not paid in full; not suited for large capital needs |
| Equity investment | High-growth freight brokerage businesses with scalable model | No debt repayment obligation | Dilution of ownership; may require investor reporting |
| Grants | Specific projects (workforce, R&D, expansion) | No repayment required | Highly competitive; restricted use; time-consuming |
Frequently Asked Questions
What credit score do I need for a Freight Brokerage business loan?
It varies by lender and product. Equipment financing and invoice factoring may work with fair credit because the asset or invoice secures the deal. SBA and bank loans typically require good credit (680+). The NBC network weighs the whole business, not the score alone.
Can I finance surety bonds and brokerage technology?
Yes. Many lenders finance software, surety bonds, and brokerage technology, secured by the asset or business cash flow. Terms track the business profile.
How fast can a Freight Brokerage business get funded?
Equipment financing and short-term loans can fund in 24 to 72 hours. Invoice factoring often funds same-day. SBA loans typically take 60 to 90 days. Through the NBC network, smaller deals can fund in hours to a few business days.
What is the difference between SBA 7(a) and SBA 504 loans?
SBA 7(a) is flexible financing up to $5 million for working capital, equipment, or real estate. SBA 504 funds fixed assets like real estate and heavy equipment with long terms up to 25 years and fixed rates on the SBA portion. You can combine both for up to $10 million total.
Can a startup Freight Brokerage business get a loan?
Often yes. Equipment financing and working capital can work for younger companies when the asset or steady sales support the deal. SBA startup loans are available but require a strong business plan.
Is there a hard credit pull to pre-qualify?
No. There is no hard credit pull to pre-qualify through the NBC network, so checking your options does not affect your credit. A hard pull may occur during full underwriting after you select an offer.
Can I finance freight broker growth and expansion?
Yes. Working capital and term loans can cover technology, hiring, and lane expansion, with terms based on cash flow and business performance.
How much can I borrow for a Freight Brokerage business?
Loan amounts range from $10,000 to $15 million depending on the product. SBA 7(a) up to $5M, equipment financing varies by asset value, invoice factoring scales with receivables volume, and term loans up to $15M through the NBC network.
What documents do I need to apply for Freight Brokerage financing?
Pre-qualification requires basic business details and recent bank statements. Full underwriting may add: 3 years of business tax returns, year-to-date financials, balance sheet, debt schedule, equipment quotes, and personal financial statements for owners with 20%+ stake.
What can I use a Freight Brokerage business loan for?
Common uses include freight brokers and 3pls, for software, bonds, and working capital, asset-light carriers, for dispatch technology and growth, dispatch services, for technology and client acquisition, and logistics and supply chain, for diversified service revenue. Lenders rarely restrict how you use term loan or working capital funds, as long as the capital supports your business.
Sources
- U.S. Small Business Administration, loan programs: sba.gov/funding-programs/loans
- Federal Reserve, Small Business Credit Survey: fedsmallbusiness.org
- Transportation Intermediaries Association (TIA): tianet.org
This page was last reviewed July 11, 2026 by Malik Samara, Managing Partner. Our editorial team reviews and updates content on a rolling basis. Learn about our editorial standards.
Manu Business Lending is a paid referral partner of National Business Capital. Financing is provided by NBC and its lender network, not by Manu, and all loans are subject to lender approval, terms, and conditions. The information on this page is for educational purposes and does not constitute financial advice. Consult a licensed financial advisor for guidance specific to your business.