Funding by Industry — Matched to Your Cash-Flow Pressure Points
Last updated: July 2026 · By the Your Capital Sources editorial team
Every industry has a signature cash-flow squeeze — and a financing structure built for it. Our funding partner REIL Capital has worked with thousands of U.S. businesses across these industries; here's what typically fits where, and why.
Construction & contracting
The squeeze: long payment cycles, mobilization costs before draws, supplier bills before milestones. The fit: bridge financing for draw gaps, equipment financing for machinery, AR financing against approved pay applications. Timing products beat generic loans here because the money is coming — it's just late.
Trucking & transportation
The squeeze: brokers pay in 30–90 days; fuel, drivers, and repairs are weekly. The fit: invoice/AR financing turns delivered loads into cash the same week, and equipment financing covers trucks and trailers. Together they solve trucking's twin pressures.
Healthcare, dental & veterinary
The squeeze: insurance reimbursement delays and equipment that costs like real estate. The fit: equipment financing for imaging, chairs, and lab systems; AR financing against insurance receivables when reimbursement lag squeezes payroll.
Manufacturing
The squeeze: materials and production paid months before customers pay. The fit: equipment financing for the line, and asset-based lending to wrap receivables and inventory into one facility that scales with production.
HVAC & skilled trades
The squeeze: seasonal demand swings, vehicle and equipment costs, commercial jobs on net terms. The fit: equipment financing for vans and gear; AR financing for commercial receivables; bridge capital ahead of the busy season.
Automotive services
The squeeze: lifts, diagnostics, and bay expansions are heavy capital; fleet-account customers pay on terms. The fit: equipment financing for shop buildouts, AR financing for fleet receivables.
Quick reference
| Industry | First product to look at | Often paired with |
|---|---|---|
| Construction | Bridge financing | Equipment + AR financing |
| Trucking | Invoice/AR financing | Equipment financing |
| Healthcare | Equipment financing | AR (insurance receivables) |
| Manufacturing | Asset-based lending | Equipment financing |
| HVAC / trades | Equipment financing | Bridge + AR |
| Automotive | Equipment financing | AR (fleet accounts) |
Industry FAQ
What financing works best for construction companies?
Bridge financing for mobilization and draw gaps, equipment financing for machinery, and AR financing against approved pay applications. Construction's long payment cycles make timing products — not just loans — the right fit.
What financing works best for trucking companies?
Invoice/AR financing converts 30–90 day broker payments into weekly cash for fuel and payroll, while equipment financing covers trucks and trailers — the two products cover trucking's twin pressures.
What financing works best for medical and dental practices?
Equipment financing for imaging, chairs, and lab equipment, plus AR financing against insurance receivables when reimbursement delays squeeze payroll.
Can manufacturers finance both equipment and inventory?
Yes — equipment financing covers the machines, and asset-based lending wraps receivables plus inventory into one facility that scales with production.
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