The structure of inventory financing matters as much as the advance rate. The choice between a revolving line of credit and a term loan determines how the facility behaves across your inventory cycle.
Revolving inventory line of credit: A revolving line of credit allows you to draw, repay, and draw again continuously within the approved credit limit and eligible inventory value. The borrowing availability fluctuates with your inventory levels — when you buy more inventory, your eligible collateral increases and you can draw more. When you sell inventory and collect cash, you repay the draw, your collateral base decreases, and you repeat the cycle. This is the optimal structure for businesses with continuous inventory cycles — distributors, wholesalers, and retailers who are constantly buying and selling inventory throughout the year.
The revolving structure also allows you to naturally increase your borrowing when you need it most (building inventory before a peak season) and repay during peak selling periods when cash is flowing in. This counter-cyclical availability is one of the most valuable features of a revolving inventory line.
Inventory term loan: An inventory term loan provides a fixed advance against a specific inventory purchase or a snapshot of inventory value at a point in time. The loan has a defined repayment schedule — monthly or quarterly payments over a fixed period — regardless of how your inventory levels change. Term loans for inventory are less common than revolving lines because they do not naturally track the inventory cycle. They are more appropriate for one-time large inventory purchases — a seasonal build, a volume purchase at a favorable price — where you want to finance a specific inventory event rather than maintain ongoing availability.
Term loans are simpler and have fewer ongoing administration requirements than revolving lines (no borrowing base certificates, no ongoing audits beyond initial underwriting in some cases). But they provide less flexibility and do not automatically adjust to your actual inventory position.