Medical practice working capital is one of the most misunderstood aspects of running a healthcare business. Physicians, dentists, chiropractors, and medspa owners share a common challenge: revenue is real, but timing is brutal. Insurance reimbursements take 30 to 90 days. Equipment breaks without warning. Payroll hits every two weeks regardless of when claims pay out.
For practices with consistent patient volume, the problem is rarely the business itself. It is the gap between when you deliver care and when you actually receive payment.
Why Cash Flow Is Harder in Healthcare
Healthcare businesses operate on a billing cycle that almost no other industry experiences. You provide a service, submit a claim, wait for insurance processing, navigate denials and resubmissions, and finally receive payment weeks or months later. Private pay patients help, but they are rarely enough to smooth the cycle entirely.
Common situations where medical practices need working capital:
- Payroll shortfalls between billing cycles when insurance reimbursements lag
- Equipment purchases or repairs that cannot wait for claims to clear
- Staffing costs during expansion or a new location build-out
- Seasonal dips in patient volume that affect monthly deposits
- Insurance payment delays after payer audits or claim disputes
These are not signs of a struggling practice. They are structural realities of the healthcare billing model. Working capital funding exists specifically to bridge that gap.
What Working Capital Covers for a Medical Practice
Working capital is the funding your practice uses to cover short-term operating costs. It is not a long-term investment - it is the cash flow that keeps daily operations running while your receivables clear.
For medical practices, working capital typically covers:
- Staff salaries and contractor payments
- Medical supplies and consumables
- Software, EHR systems, and technology costs
- Rent and facility maintenance
- Marketing and patient acquisition
- Short-term equipment needs
Why Banks Often Fall Short for Medical Practices
Banks have historically been difficult partners for healthcare businesses seeking working capital. The underwriting process is slow, collateral requirements are significant, and approval timelines can stretch 60 to 90 days. For a practice that needs to cover payroll in five days, that timeline does not work.
Alternative working capital options have grown significantly for healthcare businesses. Two of the most common structures are:
Revenue-based funding - sometimes structured as a merchant cash advance, where a funder purchases a portion of your future practice receivables. Repayment structures vary and may include daily or weekly remittances as a percentage of deposits. This works well for practices with consistent but variable cash flow, since payment amounts can adjust with your revenue rather than staying fixed regardless of how business is going.
Business lines of credit - revolving access to capital that practices draw from as needed. These typically require established business credit and consistent monthly revenue, but offer flexibility once in place.
How Medical Practices Qualify
Alternative working capital providers evaluate your practice differently than a bank does. Rather than focusing primarily on personal credit scores or years of tax returns, they look at the health of your business right now.
Key factors that matter most:
- Monthly revenue - most alternative funders look for consistent monthly deposits, typically a minimum of $10,000 to $15,000 per month
- Time in business - practices open for at least 6 to 12 months have the most options available
- Bank statement history - 3 to 6 months of business banking activity gives funders a clear picture of cash flow patterns
- Existing positions - current funding obligations are reviewed but do not automatically disqualify a practice
Unlike traditional bank underwriting, alternative working capital decisions can often be made in hours, with funding available the same day or within 24 hours of approval.
Understanding Factor Rates
Revenue-based funding uses factor rates rather than traditional interest rates. A factor rate is a simple multiplier applied to the funded amount. If you receive $50,000 with a 1.25 factor rate, the total repayment amount is $62,500.
The cost of capital is higher than a conventional bank product, and understanding that clearly before accepting any offer is essential. The tradeoff is speed, accessibility, and repayment flexibility. For a practice navigating a payroll gap or unexpected equipment failure, moving quickly rather than waiting months for a bank decision is often the right call.
Repayment structures vary across funders. Terms may include daily or weekly remittances as a percentage of deposits or fixed daily amounts. Always review the full agreement carefully before accepting any funding offer.
How Fast Can a Medical Practice Get Funded
With alternative working capital, the timeline is dramatically shorter than traditional banking. A typical process looks like this:
- Application - a short form covering basic business information
- Documentation - 3 to 6 months of business bank statements
- Decision - often within a few hours of submission
- Funding - same day or next business day in many cases
For practices in a cash flow bind, the ability to go from application to funded in under 24 hours is the core difference between alternative capital and waiting on a bank.
Working With an ISO Broker
Rather than applying to individual funders one at a time, many practice owners work with ISO brokers - independent organizations that submit your application to multiple funders simultaneously. A broker relationship gives your practice access to a wider range of options and often results in more competitive terms, since funders compete for the same deal.
Rush Vance Funding works with medical and healthcare practices as an ISO broker - not a direct lender - connecting owners with a network of funders to find the right working capital structure for their specific situation. To understand what your practice qualifies for, a quick application is the first step.