Working CapitalOpening a second restaurant location on schedule.
Greer's Kitchen had a line out the door most weekends, and Marcus had signed a lease on a second space across town. But a build-out always costs more than the quote — permits, a hood system, an extra walk-in — and the cash that was supposed to cover opening week kept getting eaten by the punch list.
Equipment Term LoanAdding two trucks to take on the contracts that were waiting.
Reyes Freight Lines kept turning down loads. Daniela had the lanes and the shippers asking for capacity, but only four trucks to run them. Every truck she added was a contract she could finally say yes to — the math was that direct.
Term LoanBuying the equipment that opened a whole new revenue line.
Castellano Auto Service had built thirty years of trust with local drivers, but the commercial fleet work in town kept going elsewhere — Tom’s shop didn’t have the heavy-duty alignment system those vehicles needed. The machine that would win that business cost more than a good year of profit.
Line of CreditRenovating a growing spa without a payment that ignores the slow weeks.
Serene Day Spa had a waitlist for treatments it didn’t have the rooms to offer. Rachel wanted to convert unused back space into two more treatment rooms, but a spa’s revenue dips in the late-summer lull, and a rigid loan payment landing during those weeks made her nervous.
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