Eligibility Criteria for Revenue Based Financing
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What Lenders Look For Before They Approve Your Application
Revenue-Based Financing (RBF) is designed to be faster and more flexible than traditional funding — but that doesn’t mean it’s guaranteed. Providers still need to be confident that your revenue can support repayment over time.
In this chapter, you’ll learn what makes a business eligible for RBF, how to improve your chances of approval, and what lenders really care about before saying yes.
Key Requirements Most RBF Lenders Expect
Consistent Monthly Revenue
The most important factor in RBF is revenue predictability. Lenders typically require:
- At least $10,000 to $20,000 in monthly revenue
- 6–12 months of consistent revenue history
- Strong gross margins (often 30% or higher)
Your revenue doesn’t have to be huge — it just needs to be stable and growing.
High-Quality Revenue Sources
It’s not just how much revenue you generate — it’s the nature of it. RBF works best when your revenue is:
- Recurring (like SaaS subscriptions or retainers)
- Collected digitally (via Stripe, Razorpay, etc.)
- Spread across multiple customers or segments
- Predictable month to month
Project-based or seasonal revenue can still qualify, but it may limit how much you’re approved for.
Financial Transparency
RBF lenders use live business data to assess your eligibility. You’ll need to share:
- Business bank statements
- Access to your accounting software (Xero, QuickBooks, Zoho Books)
- Payment gateway data (Stripe, PayPal, Shopify)
- Key financial reports (P&L, balance sheet, cash flow)
The more clean, connected, and real-time your financial data is, the faster your deal moves forward.
Healthy Margins and Cash Flow
While profitability isn’t required, your business must have enough margin to handle repayments.
Lenders will look at:
- Gross and net margins
- Burn rate and monthly expenses
- Buffer for slower months
- Breakeven timeline and operating efficiency
If revenue drops by 20%, can you still cover repayment? That’s what they want to see.
Responsible Use of Funds
RBF capital should go toward revenue-generating activities. Lenders prefer to fund:
- Marketing and paid acquisition
- Inventory or working capital
- Expansion into new markets or product lines
- Short-term bridge before equity rounds
Using RBF to cover past debt or plug cash flow gaps raises red flags.
Risk Profile
Every RBF provider will assess your risk based on:
- Churn rate or customer retention (for SaaS or recurring revenue)
- Customer concentration
- Founder track record and team background
- Industry trends and volatility
The lower your risk, the more capital you can raise — and the better your terms.
How CrossVal Helps You Qualify for RBF Faster
CrossVal helps you streamline your entire funding preparation process.
With CrossVal, you can:
- Build and share accurate, real-time financial reports
- Create revenue forecasts to demonstrate repayment ability
- Monitor cash flow, margin, and risk metrics in one dashboard
- Model multiple RBF repayment scenarios to find your safe range
- Organize documents and financial data in lender-ready formats
By managing your financials in CrossVal, you show lenders you’re not just eligible — you’re ready.
Final Thoughts
Eligibility for Revenue-Based Financing comes down to revenue quality, data visibility, and strategic use of funds. If your business has traction and clarity, you’re likely a strong candidate — even without collateral or VC backing.
Next up: Chapter 5 – How to Implement Revenue-Based Financing in Your Business
We’ll cover how to choose the right provider, negotiate fair terms, and manage repayment inside your day-to-day operations.