Emergency Business Loans

Compare the business finance products avaialble when your business needs additional funds within 48 hours.

Updated: 21st May 2026

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Written by Liam Gray

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Edited by Michelle Dymond

What is emergency finance?

Emergency finance is any form of short-term funding that delivers capital to a business as quickly as possible when an urgent financial need arises. Examples include short-term loans, merchant cash advances, invoice finance, revolving credit facilities, business overdrafts, and bridging loans.

These loans are typically unsecured, require minimal paperwork, and prioritise speed of approval over extensive due diligence. Unlike traditional finance applications, emergency financing is approved much faster, typically within days. Loan applications are streamlined with open banking integrations, paperwork is kept to a minimum, and funds can often reach your account within hours rather than weeks.

What can I use emergency finance for?

Emergency funding is usually used to bridge short-term cash flow shortfalls and for time-critical situations where the cost of inaction exceeds the cost of borrowing. Common scenarios include:

  • Emergency repairs or equipment replacement: Broken equipment, premises damage, or vehicle failure that stops you from trading.
  • Keeping a supplier relationship alive: If a key supplier demands payment or threatens to cut supply.
  • Funding seasonal demand: If stock or staff are needed before revenue catches up during a busy trading period.
  • Acting on a time-sensitive opportunity: A new contract, bulk stock purchase at a discount, or growth opportunity that requires capital now.
  • Covering a legal or insurance cost: Insurance excess payments, legal disputes, or regulatory compliance costs that cannot wait.

When considering emergency funding, ask yourself if the cost of waiting exceeds the cost of borrowing. If yes, emergency funding makes sense. If not, slower and cheaper options are usually the better answer.

How quickly can I get emergency business finance?

The speed of funding will depend on the type of finance applied for, the amount requested and the characteristics of your business. Here is a summary of the fa

ProductSpeed of fundingTypical eligibilityWhat you’ll need to apply
Short-term business loanSame day to 48 hours
  • UK-registered limited company or partnership.
  • Minimum of 6 months trading history.
  • Minimum monthly turnover of £5,000.
  • 3–6 months of business bank statements, or accept a digital connection to your bank via Open Banking.
  • Basic company details.
  • Soft credit check at the quote stage.
  • A personal guarantee is usually required from directors.
Merchant cash advance (MCA)Same day to 48 hours
  • 6 months of card sales history
  • Minimum monthly card turnover of  £1K – £20, depending on the lender.
  • UK trading address.
  • Poor credit and CCJs are frequently considered, as card sales history outweighs credit score.
  • 6–12 months of card transaction history from your card payment provider, available online.
  • Business bank statements or accept a digital connection to your bank via Open Banking.
  • Proof of ID.
  • Soft credit check.
Invoice finance

Up to 24 hours per invoice

Facility set-up: 3–14 days

  • B2B business issuing invoices on credit terms to creditworthy customers.
  • Most providers require a minimum annual turnover.
  • Copies of outstanding invoices, customer details, and the latest accounts.
  • The lender may run credit checks on your invoiced customers rather than your business.
  • Integration with accounting software (Xero, Sage, QuickBooks) speeds up set-up.
Revolving credit facility

Decision in up to 24 hours

Same-day drawdown once approved

  • UK limited company or partnership.
  • The credit limit is typically around one month’s revenue. Startups may be accepted with lower caps (e.g. £10,000).
  • Business bank account(s) linked via Open Banking
  • Company accounts are uploaded via integration with accounting software.
  • Soft credit search at the time of the quote.
  • A personal guarantee from a director is usually required.
Bridging loan

7–14 days is typical

3–7 days are achievable for simple cases

  • Property or other high-value asset to use as security
  • Typical minimums from £25,000 to £50,000.
  • Credit score is secondary to the security and exit plan.
  • Property valuation
  • Evidence of exit strategy (e.g. mortgage in principle, agreed sale)
  • Proof of ID.
  • Legal checks completed by solicitors.
Business credit card

Instant decision possible with a digital card available the same day.

Physical card 5–10 working days

  • Minimum turnover for some cards (from £24,000).
  • Minimum trading history (typically at least 12 months).
  • No recent CCJs or IVAs.
  • Business and/or personal credit reference check (full search at application).
  • Most providers offer a soft eligibility checker first.
  • Business details.
  • Recent business financials.
  • Proof of ID.

Types of emergency business finance

Emergency finance is not limited to one product. The right product for your business will depend on which loans your business is eligible for, what you need the money for, and how you plan to repay it.

Short-term business loan

Short-term business loans are fixed-sum, often unsecured, and repaid over 1-12 months, designed to cover specific costs without locking your business into multi-year debt. They suit one-off needs with a clear repayment plan. See our guide to unsecured business loans.

Merchant cash advance (MCA)

A merchant cash advance is an advance repaid automatically as a percentage of your daily card sales. Repayments rise when sales are strong and fall during quieter periods, which makes it best suited to businesses with fluctuating revenue.

Invoice finance

Invoice finance releases up to 85-90% of an unpaid invoice’s value on the day it’s issued. It’s a financing option particularly useful when cash flow problems stem from late client payments. Costs are typically 1-3% of the invoice value.

Revolving credit facility

A revolving credit facility is a pre-approved borrowing limit you can draw from, repay, and reuse. Interest applies only to the amount drawn down, making it more useful as a standing arrangement than as a one-off emergency response.

Bridging loan

A bridging loan is a short-term secured loan. These facilities charge higher rates but are useful for specific situations, such as property purchases or large tax bills.

Business credit cards

Business credit cards provide businesses with instant access to a line of credit. Credit cards are useful for smaller, day-to-day expenses or to bridge short-term gaps, as interest rates are usually very high.

Can you get emergency finance with bad credit?

Businesses with bad credit can obtain emergency financing, but fewer products and lenders are available, and costs are higher.

Some lenders will place greater reliance on live business performance data from open banking than on historical credit scores. A business with an average credit rating but strong, consistent cash flow over the past 3 months may still be approved, provided there are no recent CCJs or significant payment arrears.

To manage additional risk, lenders may offer lower borrowing limits, charge higher interest rates, or require a personal guarantee from a director. Existing debts or CCJs do not automatically disqualify you, but they will reduce your lending options.

Using a broker or comparison platform can help identify which lenders are more likely to approve a specific credit profile. For more details, see our guide to business loans for bad credit.

How much does emergency funding cost?

Emergency funding is typically more expensive than standard business loans or other forms of financing. Here’s a side-by-side comparison of the typical cost ranges, time to funding, and who each type of funding is best suited for.

Comparison of typical cost ranges by product type

ProductTypical Cost RangeTime to fundsBest For
Short-term Loan6% – 15% APR1 – 3 daysGrowth projects or specific bills
Merchant Cash Advance1.10 – 1.5 factor rateSame day – 48 hrsBusiness with a high volume of card sales, e.g. retail/hospitality
Invoice Finance1% – 3% per invoice24 – 72 hrsBridging 30-90 day payment gaps
Revolving Credit0.7% – 4.0%1 – 2 daysOngoing working capital buffer
Business Overdraft15% – 40%Immediate (if arranged)Small, unplanned cash flow dips
Bridging Loan0.75% – 1.5%2 – 7 daysFast property or asset purchase

Eligibility for emergency business loans

Lenders assess emergency business funding applications against the same core criteria as standard business loans, just faster. The characteristics of the business applying for funds and the type of lending sought will determine the types of checks the lender conducts. The key eligibility factors that will be typically assessed with bes:

Lenders assess emergency business funding applications against the same core criteria as standard business loans — just faster. The exact checks depend on the business and the product, but the key factors lenders look at are:

Trading history

Most lenders require at least 6 months of trading. A handful (iwoca, for example) will consider true startups, but typically with credit limits capped at £10,000 until trading history is established.

Turnover

Most lenders require a minimum monthly turnover of £5,000, but this can be lower for business credit card providers and some specialist startups. Unsecured emergency lending is typically capped at 1–2 months of revenue, so a business with a £20,000 monthly turnover might qualify for £20,000–£40,000 unsecured.

Recent trading trajectory

Lenders will typically take revenue direction into account, as well as the absolute level. Three months of declining turnover is often a bigger red flag than a lower-but-stable figure, particularly for fintech lenders using open banking data.

Credit profile

Lenders offering emergency business funds blend traditional credit checks with open banking data. Soft searches are often conducted at the quotation stage, but they don’t affect a director’s credit score. However, a full application does, so applying to multiple lenders in quick succession can do real damage to a director’s credit score.

A clean credit profile helps, but visibility of live cash flow can offset an average credit score with several specialist providers. Recent CCJs or significant arrears are harder to work around, although MCAs and bridging loans are the most forgiving products on adverse credit.

Affordability and existing borrowing

Lenders assess whether a business can afford the repayments, not just whether its turnover exceeds the minimum required. A business with multiple short-term lending facilities will be an underwriting red flag and will frequently be blocked from approval of new applications, even when standalone affordability looks fine. Open banking visibility makes existing debt very hard to hide.

Personal guarantees

Almost universal for unsecured emergency lending. A personal guarantee is a personal financial commitment from a director, not a business one. If the company defaults, the lender can pursue the company’s personal assets, savings, and credit.

Most short-term loans and revolving credit facilities require a guarantee from at least one director; some lenders require a homeowner guarantee for larger MCAs or short-term loans (typically above £75,000). When there are multiple directors, lenders may require a joint and several guarantee. Personal guarantee insurance is available from specialist providers and can mitigate exposure, though it’s rarely flagged at the application stage.

Security

Bridging loans and some larger short-term facilities require property or other high-value asset security. The businesses’ trading history and credit profile are secondary considerations for asset-backed lending.

Sector risk

Higher-risk sectors such as construction, transportation, and hospitality face tighter underwriting scrutiny due to elevated default rates. Some sectors will only be considered by specialist high-risk lenders (i.e. adult, gambling, crypto, regulated cannabis, and weapons). Professional services, e-commerce, and SaaS firms usually move through approval faster as they have lower risk profiles.

Business type

Most types of business funding are available to limited companies and LLPs. Sole traders have options, but the field is narrower, particularly for larger amounts. Limited company applications are assessed primarily on the business credit file with a personal guarantee from directors, whilst sole traders are assessed on personal credit alone.

Meeting these criteria is the threshold to apply. The strength of your trading history, credit profile and turnover then determines pricing and limits — many businesses qualify in principle but receive offers well below their funding need or at the higher end of the rate range.

Pros and cons of emergency business loans

Emergency business loans can be advantageous when speed matters, but they come with trade-offs that should be considered before you apply.

Pros

  • Faster access to funds. Decisions can be made in hours and funding received within 24–48 hours for most products, compared to weeks for traditional bank lending.
  • Streamlined applications. Online forms, open banking integrations, and minimal paperwork are used instead of the document-heavy processes of conventional bank loans.
  • Protects revenue and operations. A short, expensive loan can be cheaper than the cost of the problem it solves (e.g. a lost contract, a stock shortage during peak season, or a missed tax deadline).
  • Accessible with imperfect credit. MCAs and invoice finance in weigh cash flow and sales history over credit score, opening up funding to businesses that high street lenders would decline.
  • Broad product range. Short-term loans, MCAs, invoice finance, revolving credit, bridging, and business credit cards each suit different emergency scenarios.

Cons

  • Higher cost of borrowing. The overall cost is materially higher than traditional business funding. The speed and accessibility premium is real, and on an annualised basis, the cost can be high.
  • Short repayment terms compress cash flow. Repaying over 3–18 months means higher monthly outgoings than a multi-year facility, which can strain the same cash flow the loan was meant to fix.
  • Risk of a debt cycle. Using emergency funding to plug recurring cash flow gaps without addressing the underlying issue can lead to repeated borrowing and, in some cases, using multiple products concurrently, which makes future borrowing harder.
  • Personal guarantees are near-universal. Most unsecured products require a personal guarantee from at least one director, putting personal assets and credit at risk if the business can’t repay.
  • Urgency erodes negotiating position. With less time to compare offers, businesses often accept the first viable option rather than the best one, which typically results in higher rates, lower funding limits, or tighter covenants than would be available with more time.

FAQs

Yes, some emergency business loan products are available to those with bad credit. However, directors or businesses with a poor credit history should expect to be offered lower borrowing limits and higher rates.

A company with poor credit is more likely to get approved for Merchant cash advances (MCAs) or invoice finance. This is because the lender’s underwriting process will place more weight on card sales history for MCAs, and the credit check sits with your customer, not your business, for invoice finance.  

Applying for a business finance quote or checking eligibility typically triggers a soft search. A soft search is invisible to other lenders and does not affect your credit score. A hard search only occurs when you decide to proceed with an application and is recorded on your credit file and visible to other lenders for 12 months. Multiple hard searches within a short period can temporarily reduce your score and signal financial distress, making it harder to be approved elsewhere.

Most brokers run a single soft search across multiple lenders at the quotation stage, which is the safest way to shop around. Be careful to read the terms of high-street bank business finance applications, as clicking “apply” can sometimes trigger an immediate hard search.

It depends on how collateral is defined. If it refers to fixed assets such as property, equipment, or vehicles, most emergency business finance is unsecured. The main exception is bridging finance, which requires property or another high-value asset as security.

However, several emergency business finance products are technically secured against a revenue stream rather than a fixed asset. Merchant cash advances are secured against future card sales, and invoice finance is secured against your unpaid invoices (the lender will also typically take a debenture over the business). From the borrower’s perspective, these behave more like unsecured products (i.e. your premises, home, and equipment aren’t at risk), but they aren’t strictly unsecured.

For unsecured products, the lender will almost always require a personal guarantee from at least one director. If the business can’t repay, the director is personally liable, which can put personal assets, savings, and credit at risk.

Contact the lender immediately. Most business finance providers have hardship procedures and prefer to negotiate revised terms, payment holidays, extended terms, or restructured repayments rather than pursue default. The earlier the conversation, the more options you’ll have. Missed payments damage your business credit file and, if there’s a personal guarantee in place, your personal credit profile.

Persistent default can result in legal action, CCJs, and enforcement against personally guaranteed assets. Free, impartial debt advice is available from Business Debtline.

Some lenders accept applications from startups trading for 3–6 months, though for smaller amounts and at higher rates. For example, iwoca considers true startups but typically caps credit limits at £10,000 until trading history is established.

Merchant cash advances are another viable option for businesses that accept card payments, since underwriting focuses on sales volume rather than trading history.

For businesses under 36 months old, the government-backed Start Up Loan scheme offers up to £25,000 at a fixed 7.5% rate with 12 months of free mentoring but the application takes weeks rather than hours, so it isn’t a true emergency option

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