Construction Funding in Seattle: Same-Day MCA, ByzFlex & Term Loans
Running a construction company in Seattle means project-based, milestone-paid revenue with heavy upfront material costs. Weather and project pipelines create uneven cash flow across the year. Seattle's housing and commercial construction boom has created a contractor cash-flow crisis — project timelines stretch while material and labor costs spike, and traditional bank financing is too rigid and slow for the pace of work. When you need capital fast, banks hesitate on contractors with lumpy, project-dependent revenue. Byzfunder is a direct funder built for it: we fund from our own balance sheet, weigh your revenue over your credit score, and move in hours, not weeks.
Why Seattle construction companies use revenue-based funding
Seattle is the Pacific Northwest's tech and aerospace capital — Amazon, Boeing, and Microsoft anchor a dense SMB ecosystem in retail, food service, construction, and professional services, with strong Pacific Rim trade activity through the Port of Seattle. For construction companies here, the problem isn't demand — it's the gap between when money goes out and when it comes in. For larger, fixed material and equipment costs, a term loan's predictable payoff plan fits a contractor's milestone-paid revenue.
Common reasons Seattle construction companies reach for working capital:
- Buying materials before a job pays out
- Covering payroll across project milestones
- Renting or repairing equipment
- Bridging to the next contract
Your funding options as a construction company in Seattle
| Option | What it is | FICO floor | Best for construction companies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Merchant Cash Advance | A purchase of future receivables — not a loan. Repayment flexes with sales. | 525+ | Fast, sales-linked capital with same-day funding |
| ByzFlex | Revenue-based revolving capital — draw what you need as you need it. | 550+ | Recurring or unpredictable costs across the month |
| Term Loan ✅ | Upfront capital with a fixed, predictable payoff plan (via the affiliated Byzwash entity). | 550+ | Larger one-time costs with a clear payback horizon |
For most construction companies, Term Loan is the natural fit ($25,000–$500,000 is a typical range, not a promise — your offer depends on your file). How each works:
- Merchant Cash Advance — A purchase of your future receivables, not a loan. Capital upfront, repaid as a small, flexible share of daily sales. FICO 525+.
- ByzFlex — Byzfunder's revenue-based revolving capital. Draw as costs hit, pay for what you use. FICO 550+.
- Term Loan — Upfront capital with a fixed payoff plan, via the affiliated Byzwash entity. Best for larger, one-time needs. FICO 550+.
What Seattle construction companies qualify for
Byzfunder underwrites on business performance, not just credit:
- FICO: 525+ for MCA, 550+ for ByzFlex
- Revenue: typically $20,000+ in monthly revenue — strong deposits can outweigh a lower score
- Time in business: the longer your track record, the better your terms
- Documents: a short application plus a few months of business bank statements
There's no "guaranteed approval" — every file is reviewed on its own merits. But strong revenue can outweigh an imperfect credit score.
Washington considerations
Washington has no specific commercial-financing disclosure statute as of 2026, though Byzfunder provides clear factor-rate and total-cost terms upfront regardless. Either way, you'll see clear terms before you sign — one underwriter, one point of contact, no surprise fees, no third-party re-underwrite.
How fast can Seattle construction companies get funded?
Apply in minutes, get a decision in hours, and — for many Seattle construction companies — see funds the same day. One application, one underwriter, one point of contact. No broker chain, no bank runaround.
Ready to move? Apply now and see what your Seattle construction business qualifies for — checking won't affect your credit.
Keep exploring: Construction funding guide · Seattle small-business funding · How a merchant cash advance works · ByzFlex revenue-based capital