Last updated: May 2026

Retail Inventory Financing

Inventory Financing for Retail and E-Commerce Businesses

Inventory is the lifeblood of a retail business — but it ties up capital in ways that can constrain growth, limit your ability to take advantage of supplier deals, and create cash flow gaps between when you pay for goods and when you collect from customers. The right inventory financing structure lets you stock what you need to grow sales without depleting the working capital that runs daily operations. This guide explains each major inventory financing product, the typical advance rates by inventory type, qualification criteria, and how to select the right structure for your business model.

  • Purchase order financing vs. inventory loans vs. revenue-based advances
  • Typical advance rates: 50%–80% of inventory value depending on type
  • Qualification criteria and required documentation
  • Which structure fits brick-and-mortar retail vs. e-commerce

How inventory financing works

Inventory financing is a form of asset-based lending where the goods a business holds — or plans to purchase — serve as collateral for a loan or line of credit. Unlike traditional business loans that are underwritten primarily on cash flow and credit, inventory financing is underwritten on the value and liquidity of the inventory itself. A business with strong inventory quality and proven turnover can qualify for inventory financing even if its overall credit profile would not support an unsecured term loan.

The fundamental concept is a borrowing base: the lender establishes the eligible inventory value (usually based on the net orderly liquidation value, or NOLV, determined by an appraisal), applies an advance rate (50% to 80% depending on inventory type), and the resulting dollar amount is the maximum you can borrow against that inventory. As inventory is sold and new inventory is purchased, the borrowing base moves up and down accordingly.

Inventory financing is particularly valuable for three types of retail situations: pre-season stock-ups for seasonal retailers who need to build inventory before peak revenue arrives; opportunistic bulk purchases where a supplier offers a significant price break for buying in volume; and growth-stage businesses expanding product lines or SKU counts faster than internal cash flow can support.

The mechanics differ significantly across the four main product types — purchase order financing, inventory loans, revenue-based advances, and supplier trade credit — and each is best suited to a different operational profile. The sections below explain each in detail.

Purchase order financing

Purchase order (PO) financing is designed for the specific situation where you have a confirmed order from a customer but lack the capital to pay your supplier to fulfill it. The PO financing company pays your supplier directly — often via wire or letter of credit — enabling fulfillment of the order. When the goods are delivered and invoiced to your customer, and the customer pays, the PO financing company recovers its advance plus fees. The business receives the spread between the customer payment and the financed supplier cost.

PO financing is not a general working capital tool — it is transactional. Each deal is structured around a specific purchase order and the associated supplier payment. This makes it highly useful for businesses that win large orders they cannot fulfill with available capital, but it does not provide revolving liquidity for ongoing inventory management.

The underwriting in PO financing focuses primarily on two parties: your customer (whose creditworthiness determines whether they will pay the resulting invoice) and your supplier (whose reliability determines whether the goods will be delivered as expected). The PO financing company is essentially taking credit risk on your customer's ability and willingness to pay, which is why strong, established commercial customers are essential for PO deals.

PO financing is typically more expensive than inventory loans — fees often run 2% to 5% of the financed amount per 30-day period. But for a business that has the margin to support those fees and would otherwise turn away profitable orders for lack of capital, PO financing can be transformative. Typical deal sizes range from $50,000 to $5 million, and most PO lenders require the gross margin on the transaction to exceed 20% to 25% to ensure there is enough spread to cover financing costs and leave meaningful profit.

Inventory loans and revolving facilities

An inventory loan or revolving inventory facility is a broader, more flexible form of inventory-backed financing. Rather than being tied to a single purchase order, an inventory line of credit is secured by your ongoing inventory holdings and adjusts as inventory levels fluctuate. It functions similarly to an accounts receivable line of credit but uses inventory as the collateral pool.

Inventory-based revolvers are typically offered by commercial banks (usually requiring $1 million or more in annual inventory and strong financial statements) and by asset-based lenders (ABL lenders) who specialize in inventory-secured credit facilities for businesses that do not meet bank standards. ABL lenders are more flexible on credit criteria but charge higher rates than banks — typically prime plus 3% to 8% for inventory lines, compared to prime plus 1% to 3% at a bank.

A critical concept in inventory lending is the advance rate, which varies by inventory type. Lenders are conservative about advance rates because in a liquidation scenario, retail inventory sells for significantly less than cost or retail value. The NOLV (net orderly liquidation value) for most retail inventory is 40% to 70% of cost, meaning a $100,000 inventory position might only fetch $40,000 to $70,000 if the business failed and inventory were sold through an orderly liquidation process. Lenders set advance rates against NOLV, not against cost or retail value, which is why actual borrowing availability is often less than business owners expect.

Inventory loans also typically require ongoing reporting: monthly or quarterly inventory reports, sometimes annual third-party appraisals, and in some cases field examinations where the lender's representative physically audits the inventory against reported values. This reporting burden is one reason smaller retail businesses often find revenue-based advances more practical than formal inventory lending facilities.

Advance rates by inventory type

Advance rates are not uniform — they depend on how quickly and reliably inventory can be converted to cash in a worst-case scenario. Here is how most inventory lenders think about advance rates across major retail inventory categories.

Inventory Type Typical Advance Rate Why This Rate Examples
Branded consumer goods / commodity products 65%–80% of NOLV High secondary market liquidity; recognizable brands sell quickly at predictable prices Major brand electronics, household goods, tools, auto parts
General finished goods (non-fashion) 50%–65% of NOLV Reasonable liquidity; not highly specialized but no brand premium Hardware, kitchenware, sporting goods, home furnishings
Fashion and apparel (non-seasonal) 40%–55% of NOLV Style-dependent; higher risk of obsolescence; liquidation value can drop quickly Clothing, footwear, accessories, lifestyle goods
Seasonal or time-sensitive goods 30%–45% of NOLV Value drops sharply after season ends; forced liquidation often at steep discount Holiday goods, seasonal apparel, perishable-adjacent products
Perishable goods Typically not financed by most lenders No residual value; cannot serve as durable collateral Food, flowers, live plants
Work in progress (WIP) 20%–35% of NOLV, if eligible Incomplete goods have limited liquidation value; not all lenders advance against WIP Partially assembled products, in-process manufacturing

Revenue-based advances for retail inventory

Revenue-based advances — including merchant cash advances — are not technically inventory financing, but many retail and e-commerce businesses use them to fund inventory purchases because they are faster, simpler, and do not require the inventory appraisals, reporting, and collateral perfection of a formal inventory lending facility. The lender advances capital based on your revenue history, and repayment comes as a percentage of ongoing sales — daily or weekly ACH debits in most structures.

For retail businesses with high inventory turnover and consistent monthly revenue, revenue-based advances work well for inventory funding because the cash conversion cycle is short. A retailer who buys inventory this week, sells it within 30 to 60 days, and uses the revenue to repay the advance is using the product as designed. Problems arise when inventory is slow-moving and repayments continue regardless of whether the inventory has sold.

E-commerce businesses — particularly Amazon FBA sellers, Shopify merchants, and direct-to-consumer brands — are well served by a new category of revenue-based lenders specifically designed for the e-commerce model. Platforms like Clearco (formerly Clearbanc), Wayflyer, Capchase, and others analyze your store's revenue data directly (often through API connections to Shopify, Amazon Seller Central, Stripe, or PayPal) and offer advances based on your recent sales history. These platforms often move faster than traditional MCA lenders — approval in hours, funding in 24 to 48 hours — with somewhat lower factor rates for established e-commerce businesses with strong revenue histories.

The key advantage of revenue-based advances for inventory is simplicity: no inventory appraisal, no collateral perfection filing, no monthly inventory reports. The key disadvantage is cost — revenue-based advances are consistently more expensive than asset-backed inventory lines. For businesses doing $1 million or more in annual inventory purchasing, a formal inventory line is almost always worth the setup complexity for the cost savings it provides.

Retail inventory financing product comparison

Product Best For Typical Cost Speed Key Requirement
Purchase order financing Fulfilling confirmed customer orders you can't fund 2%–5% per 30 days of financed amount 5–10 business days Confirmed PO from creditworthy customer; 20%+ gross margin
Inventory revolving line (bank) Larger established retailers with $500K+ inventory Prime + 1%–3% APR 4–8 weeks to establish Strong financials; 2+ years in business; inventory appraisal
Inventory revolving line (ABL lender) Mid-market retailers who don't qualify for bank Prime + 3%–8% APR plus fees 2–4 weeks to establish Inventory appraisal; field exam; ongoing reporting
Revenue-based advance / MCA Smaller retailers needing fast inventory capital Factor rate 1.20–1.45; effective APR varies widely 24–72 hours $10,000+/month revenue; 3+ months in business; clean bank statements
E-commerce platform advance Amazon FBA, Shopify, DTC e-commerce sellers Flat fee 6%–12% of advance (varies by platform) 24–48 hours after data review Established store revenue; connected marketplace/payment data
Supplier trade credit / net terms Any retailer with established supplier relationship 0% if paid on time; 1.5%–2.5% per month if extended (where applicable) Immediate (already negotiated) Supplier relationship; credit check by supplier; payment history

Supplier trade credit: the cheapest inventory financing you may already have

Before applying for any formal inventory financing product, retail business owners should maximize their use of supplier trade credit — payment terms that allow you to receive inventory now and pay for it in 30, 60, or 90 days. Trade credit is the original form of inventory financing, and for established businesses with good payment histories, it is often available in meaningful amounts at zero cost if paid on time.

Standard trade terms in retail are "net 30" — payment due 30 days after invoice date. Many suppliers offer extended terms of net 60 or net 90 for customers who request them and have a track record of on-time payment. Some offer early payment discounts like "2/10 net 30" — meaning a 2% discount if paid within 10 days, otherwise full payment in 30 days. That 2% discount for 20 days of early payment is equivalent to approximately 36% annualized return on the early payment — a compelling reason to use your line of credit to pay suppliers early and capture the discount.

For growing retailers who need more trade credit than their current suppliers offer, there are two paths: trade credit insurance (which insures your receivables and can encourage suppliers to extend more credit) and factoring companies who advance against purchase orders and then pay suppliers directly — effectively providing trade finance in a different structural form.

If you are a retail business owner who has maxed out supplier trade credit and needs additional inventory capital, the next step is matching you to the right product based on your inventory type, business model, and revenue profile. Axiant Partners works with retailers, e-commerce businesses, and their advisors to identify appropriate inventory financing structures. Use the link below to start the process.

E-commerce inventory financing: specific considerations

E-commerce businesses face a set of inventory financing challenges that differ meaningfully from traditional brick-and-mortar retail. Inventory may be held in multiple fulfillment centers, may include goods manufactured overseas with 60 to 90 day lead times, and may be stored in Amazon's warehouse network under FBA arrangements where the business technically holds the inventory but does not have physical access to it in the traditional sense.

Traditional inventory lenders often struggle with FBA inventory because they cannot perfect a security interest in goods held at Amazon's fulfillment centers in the conventional way. This has created an opening for e-commerce-specific lenders who use revenue data as the primary underwriting basis rather than inventory collateral. For most Amazon FBA sellers, Shopify stores, and multi-channel e-commerce businesses, revenue-based advances from e-commerce-specific lenders are more practical than traditional inventory loans.

The underwriting for e-commerce revenue advances is distinctive: lenders connect directly to your Shopify, Amazon Seller Central, PayPal, Stripe, or other platform accounts and analyze sales data, refund rates, inventory velocity, and seasonal patterns algorithmically. This can produce approvals in hours and funding in 24 to 48 hours. The cost is typically a flat percentage of the advanced amount — some platforms express this as a factor rate (1.06 to 1.15, lower than MCA) and collect repayment as a percentage of ongoing sales.

Key metrics e-commerce inventory lenders evaluate include: trailing 3 and 12-month revenue, month-over-month revenue trend, average order value, refund rate, inventory turnover ratio, and the ratio of COGS to revenue (which indicates margin health). Businesses with declining revenue trends, high refund rates, or margins below 20% will find financing options limited regardless of revenue volume.

Qualification criteria and required documentation

Qualification criteria for inventory financing vary by product type. Here is a practical summary of what most lenders require across the major product categories, along with the documents you will need to assemble before applying.

  • Purchase order financing: Confirmed PO from a creditworthy commercial customer (government entities and major corporations are ideal); supplier invoice or proforma; business application; proof of business entity; at least 6 months in business; gross margin of 20%+; no existing liens on inventory. The PO financing company will verify your customer's creditworthiness independently.
  • Inventory revolving line (bank or ABL): Minimum 2 years in business; $500,000+ in annual inventory for most bank programs; audited or reviewed financial statements; current inventory list with valuations; third-party appraisal of inventory NOLV; UCC-1 filing authorization; personal guarantee of owner(s).
  • Revenue-based advance / MCA: At least 3 months in business; $10,000+ in average monthly revenue deposited to business bank account; 3 to 6 months of business bank statements; business application; owner ID; minimal NSF activity. No inventory appraisal required.
  • E-commerce platform advance: Established store (typically 6+ months of data); connected marketplace or payment processor account; minimum $5,000 to $25,000 in monthly revenue (varies by platform); positive monthly revenue trend preferred.

FAQ

Questions about retail inventory financing

What is inventory financing and how does it work for retail businesses?

Inventory financing advances capital against the value of inventory you hold or plan to purchase. Lenders advance 50%–80% of the inventory's appraised liquidation value, and repayment is structured as the inventory sells. It is used for seasonal stock-ups, bulk supplier purchases, and growth-stage inventory expansion. Commodity and branded goods advance at higher rates than fashion or perishable goods.

What is the difference between purchase order financing and inventory financing?

PO financing pays your supplier directly when you have a confirmed customer purchase order — it is transactional and deal-specific. Inventory financing applies to goods you already hold or are acquiring without a specific customer order. PO financing is ideal for fulfilling large confirmed orders. Inventory loans are better for ongoing inventory management and pre-season stock-ups.

What advance rates are typical for retail inventory financing?

Advance rates on retail inventory typically range from 50% to 80% of the inventory's appraised net orderly liquidation value (NOLV). Branded/commodity goods advance at 65%–80%, general finished goods at 50%–65%, fashion and apparel at 40%–55%, and seasonal goods at 30%–45%. Perishables and WIP are typically ineligible or advance at much lower rates.

Can an e-commerce business get inventory financing?

Yes — e-commerce businesses commonly use revenue-based advances from platforms like Clearco and Wayflyer that analyze marketplace and payment data. Traditional inventory loans are harder to arrange for FBA inventory. Most e-commerce businesses find that revenue-based products from e-commerce-specific lenders are faster, more practical, and well-suited to their high-turnover inventory model even though they cost more than a formal inventory line.

What documents do I need to apply for inventory financing?

For PO financing: the purchase order, supplier proforma, and business documentation. For inventory revolving lines: financial statements, inventory appraisal, and inventory reports. For revenue-based advances: 3–6 months of business bank statements and a business application. E-commerce lenders typically require connected marketplace/payment data rather than traditional bank statements.

Need inventory financing?

Get Matched to the Right Inventory Financing Product

Axiant Partners works with retail and e-commerce businesses to identify the right inventory financing structure — whether that is a PO facility for large customer orders, a revenue-based advance for fast-moving inventory, or an asset-based line of credit for a larger inventory operation. Tell us about your business and we will match you to appropriate options.