Merchant Cash Advance for Construction Contractors in Florida: 2026 Guide

How Florida construction contractors use MCAs to bridge draw gaps and material spikes, plus HB 1353 dollar-cost disclosure rules and real factor-rate math.

Quick Answer

Florida construction contractors use merchant cash advances because construction cash flow is brutal — they front materials and labor for weeks, bill progress draws that take 30-90 days to pay, and have 5-10% of every contract held back as retainage until closeout. Across Florida's fast-growing residential and commercial markets, framing, concrete, roofing, electrical, and finish subs bridge these gaps with ACH-based advances of roughly 5,000 to 2,000,000 dollars at factor rates of 1.15-1.50, with construction typically 1.20-1.50 because milestone revenue is lumpy and storm-season weather stalls billable work. Florida's HB 1353 (the Commercial Financing Disclosure Law, effective January 1, 2024) requires providers to disclose the total dollar cost and disbursement amount before you sign any transaction of 500,000 dollars or less — but unlike California and New York, Florida does NOT require an APR, so you must calculate it yourself. A contractor taking 80,000 dollars at a 1.34 factor repays 107,200 dollars — a short bridge to a specific near-term draw, not a way to carry a whole job.

Merchant Cash Advance for Construction Contractors in Florida: 2026 Guide

Construction is a business of fronting money. A Florida contractor buys materials, mobilizes a crew, and performs weeks of work before submitting a progress draw that then takes 30, 60, even 90 days to pay. On top of that, owners and general contractors hold back 5-10% of every contract as retainage until the project is complete and signed off. So even on a profitable job, a contractor can be deeply cash-negative for months.

That structural gap is why construction contractors are frequent users of merchant cash advances. Florida has 3.5 million small businesses and three MCA providers headquartered in the state, so contractors here have plenty of funders competing for the work. This guide explains how MCAs work for Florida contractors, what HB 1353 requires, and when a cheaper tool is the right call.


Why Florida Construction Cash Flow Is Different

Most businesses get paid close to when they deliver. Construction inverts that: costs hit first and heavy, payment arrives late and in chunks, and a slice of every dollar is held hostage as retainage.

The mobilization crunch. Starting a job means buying materials and staffing a crew before any draw is billed. On a 400,000 dollar contract, first-month material and labor outlays can run 80,000 to 150,000 dollars with nothing yet collected.

The progress-draw lag. A submitted draw is a request that travels through the GC, the owner, the lender, and the inspector before a check is cut. Delays of 30-90 days are normal, and a single disputed line item can hold an entire draw.

Retainage lockup. The final 5-10% of each contract — often the whole margin — stays locked until completion, then frequently slips past the promised release date.

Storm season. Hurricanes, tropical storms, and summer downpours stall billable progress across Florida while fixed costs continue — and can compress a project’s schedule into penalty territory once weather clears.

An MCA bridges these by funding now and recovering from upcoming draws.


How MCAs Work for Florida Contractors (ACH-Based)

Construction payments come by check, ACH, and wire, so contractors use ACH-based merchant cash advances — bank-statement or revenue-based programs. The funder reviews 3-6 months of statements, confirms average monthly deposits, and sets a fixed daily or weekly ACH debit tied to those deposits, not to card volume.

For a contractor averaging 120,000 dollars in monthly deposits:

Advance AmountFactor RateTotal RepaymentDaily ACH (~250-day term)
60,0001.2876,800307
100,0001.35135,000540
200,0001.42284,0001,136

Construction contractors typically see factor rates of 1.20-1.50 — higher than restaurants or retail because milestone-based revenue is lumpy and weather-dependent. Because HB 1353 gives you the total dollar cost but not an APR, run each of these through the calculator before comparing.


Common Use Cases for Florida Construction MCAs

Materials before a draw. Lumber, concrete, block, rebar, roofing, and specialty materials must be bought before the work that bills them is performed. A sub might need 40,000 to 150,000 dollars to order materials for a project phase, repaid from the draw that phase generates.

Payroll across the draw gap. Crews are paid weekly; draws pay monthly or slower. A contractor running three crews can carry 50,000 to 120,000 dollars in monthly labor while waiting on payment.

Mobilizing a new awarded job. Bonds, permits, initial materials, and crew mobilization come before the first draw. An advance can fund mobilization when the contract is signed but the first payment is weeks out.

Equipment repair to keep a job moving. A failed excavator or lift can stall a job and trigger schedule penalties. Equipment financing is cheaper for planned purchases, but an MCA can fund an emergency repair within 24-48 hours to keep a crew working.


What Florida HB 1353 Gives Construction Contractors

Under HB 1353, the Florida Commercial Financing Disclosure Law (effective January 1, 2024), every provider must deliver a written disclosure before any transaction of 500,000 dollars or less: the total financing amount, the net disbursement you actually receive, the total amount to be repaid, the total dollar cost, payment details, and prepayment terms. The Florida Attorney General is the sole enforcer, with penalties of 500 dollars per violation up to a 20,000 dollar cap (rising to 1,000 dollars and 50,000 dollars after notice), and there is no private right of action.

The critical gap: Florida does not require an APR. A provider can legally quote you a 1.35 factor rate and a 67,500 dollar total repayment on a 50,000 dollar advance without ever telling you that works out to roughly 70-75% APR at a six-month pace. That makes the MCA calculator essential — take the total repayment from the disclosure, subtract the advance, and convert to an annualized cost you can compare. For the full statewide picture, see the Florida MCA state guide.


Real Cost Example: Bridging a Progress Draw

A South Florida site-work contractor averages 140,000 dollars in monthly deposits and is two-thirds through a 500,000 dollar contract. The next 90,000 dollar progress draw was submitted three weeks ago and is expected to pay in another 30-45 days.

Situation: Two payroll cycles (55,000 dollars) and a 30,000 dollar aggregate order are due now; the bank balance is 20,000 dollars.

MCA offer:

  • Advance: 80,000 dollars
  • Factor rate: 1.34
  • Total repayment: 107,200 dollars
  • Term: approximately 8 months
  • Daily ACH: ~536 dollars per business day

Revenue impact: At ~6,700 dollars in daily deposits during active billing, the 536 dollar payment is about 8% — comfortable. The exposure is delay risk: if the draw slips and billable work pauses, that fixed debit keeps pulling from a thinner account.

Total cost: 27,200 dollars on 80,000 dollars borrowed (34% of the advance). Expensive capital, justified only if the 90,000 dollar draw reliably lands inside the window and the contract margin absorbs the cost.


Alternatives and Next Steps

Financing TypeAPR RangeBest For
Contractor line of credit10-30%Recurring materials and payroll gaps
Equipment financing6-25%Excavators, trucks, lifts
Material supplier terms0-lowStretching net-30/60 on supplies
SBA 7(a) loan9.75-13.25%Yard purchase, major expansion
Merchant cash advance60-200%+ APRSpeed-critical bridge to a near-term draw

For recurring gaps, a contractor line of credit is the right long-term tool; for machinery, equipment financing wins on cost. Use an MCA only when a draw is close and nothing else is fast enough.

  1. Tie the advance to a draw — confirm the near-term receivable lands inside the repayment window.
  2. Demand the HB 1353 disclosure and calculate the APR yourself, since Florida does not require it.
  3. Compare offers in the MCA provider directory — rates vary 10-20% across funders.
  4. Model the impact with the MCA calculator, stress-tested against a 30-day draw delay.
  5. Read the full construction playbook at Merchant Cash Advance for Construction Contractors.

Disclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes only and is not financial or legal advice. Factor rates and requirements vary by provider and change over time. Consult a Florida attorney and a financial advisor before signing any commercial financing agreement.

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