Unlike a term loan with a set maturity date, MCAs do not have a fixed repayment term. Repayment ends when the total purchased amount has been fully collected — the timeline is determined by the business's actual revenue and the holdback percentage.
Most MCAs are designed to be repaid in 3 to 18 months based on projected revenue at the time of origination. A provider who advances $50,000 with a 1.30 factor rate (total repayment: $65,000) and a 15% holdback against projected monthly revenue of $50,000 expects daily collections of roughly $2,500 — meaning the advance should be repaid in about 26 business days per $65,000 ÷ $2,500, which equates to roughly 5–6 months.
In practice, businesses often experience revenue variation. A restaurant that is busy in summer and slow in winter will repay faster in summer months and slower in winter — the total repayment stays the same, the timeline shifts. There is no penalty for slow repayment (the factor rate is already built into the total owed), and in most standard MCA agreements there is also no benefit for fast repayment — the full total owed must be paid regardless of timing.
This is a meaningful difference from interest-based financing: prepaying a loan early reduces the total interest cost, but prepaying an MCA does not reduce the factor cost — the total is fixed at origination. Referral partners explaining MCA cost should make this clear to clients who might expect a discount for early repayment.