Home Healthcare Agency Financing Nationwide for Home Health and Care Agencies, $10K to $5M
🏠 Financing Built for Home CareI’m Kevin Kermeen, a nationwide commercial loan broker, not a bank. Home healthcare agency financing funds the moment a bank won’t, covering payroll while you wait on Medicare and insurance reimbursements, buying or starting an agency, or growing your client census. You pay caregivers every week but get paid in 30 to 90 days; I match you to lenders who bridge that gap and fund the growth.
Home Healthcare Agency Financing for Every Stage
Whether you’re making payroll between reimbursements, buying an agency, or growing your census, there’s a path built for it. Here’s what home healthcare agency financing commonly covers at every stage.
Payroll and Working Capital
Cover caregiver payroll every week while Medicare and insurance reimbursements catch up. The single biggest need in home care.
AR and Invoice Factoring
Turn slow Medicare, Medicaid and insurance receivables into cash now, so growth never outruns your bank balance.
Agency Acquisition
Buy an established home health or home care agency with clients and caregivers in place. SBA 7(a) is built for this.
Startup and Licensing
Open a new agency, licensing, accreditation, software, recruiting and working capital to reach your first clients.
Technology and Recruiting
Fund EVV and scheduling software, payroll systems and the recruiting spend that keeps caregivers on the schedule.
Expansion and New Territories
Add a service line, open a new territory, or fund a line of credit that flexes with your census.
A Growing Home Care Agency Couldn’t Make Payroll While Waiting on Medicare
A home care agency was winning new clients faster than it could fund them, paying caregivers every Friday but waiting 60 to 90 days on Medicare and insurance. Growth was strangling cash flow, and the bank would not move fast enough.
They called me. I matched them to accounts-receivable financing and a working-capital line that advanced cash against their Medicare and insurance receivables, so payroll was covered the moment caregivers worked, not 90 days later. The cash crunch ended, and the agency kept signing clients without fear of missing a paycheck.
That’s what the right match looks like for a home care agency. Don’t Beg the Bank! Get funded instead.
How I Fund Home Care Agencies, the Right Tool for Each Need
Home healthcare agency financing isn’t one product. The right structure depends on whether you need cash flow, growth or an acquisition. I match you to the one that fits, tap any to explore it.
Working Capital Loans
The core tool for home care, cover payroll and operations through the reimbursement gap.
See working capitalInvoice Factoring
Advance cash against Medicare, Medicaid and insurance receivables so you never wait 90 days to get paid.
See invoice factoringSBA 7(a) Loans
Buying or starting an agency? SBA 7(a) funds the acquisition or launch, often with limited money down.
See SBA 504Line of Credit
A revolving line that flexes with your census, draw to make payroll, repay as reimbursements land.
See line of creditWorking Capital
Cover licensing, software, recruiting and operations before your first clients onboard.
See working capitalStartup Funding
Launching a brand-new agency with little history? Honest startup paths to your first clients.
See lines of creditQualifying for Home Healthcare Agency Financing
Home healthcare agency financing is different from a generic business loan. Lenders know agencies have valuable, reliable receivables from Medicare, Medicaid and insurers, so an agency with billable clients and solid receivables is a strong borrower even with thin hard assets. I qualify deals honestly.
✅ What helps you qualify
- ✔A licensed home health or home care agency, or a plan to start or buy one.
- ✔Strong personal credit, the foundation for a new dentist with limited history.
- ✔For acquisition: a practice with solid, documented cash flow.
- ✔A down payment or contribution, which a parent or family member can help with.
💡 Straight talk
- →Working capital and factoring underwrite your receivables, not just hard collateral.
- →SBA 7(a) covers acquisitions and startups, often with limited money down.
- →Credit is flexible, there’s no single hard FICO floor; stronger credit means better terms.
- →The reimbursement gap is normal in home care; the right structure turns it into an advantage.
Get Your Home Healthcare Agency Financing Options
A quick, no-pressure pre-qualification. I personally review every submission, no call center, no junior rep.
Got it. I’m on it.
Your home healthcare agency financing request landed in my inbox. I personally review every submission and most responses go out within one business hour.
Watch for a call from me, Kevin Kermeen, I call directly, I don’t text.
Recent Home Healthcare Agency Financing From My Desk
A snapshot of the home healthcare agency financing I match to lenders nationwide, agency by agency. Every dentist and practice is different, yours starts with a conversation.
Home Healthcare Agency Financing · AR
A growing agency used accounts-receivable financing to cover payroll the moment caregivers worked, not 90 days later.
Agency Acquisition
An operator bought an established home care agency with clients and caregivers in place via an SBA 7(a) loan.
Working Capital Line
An agency opened a revolving line of credit to flex with census, drawing for payroll and repaying as claims paid.
How I Match Home Healthcare Agency Financing to the Right Lender
Not every lender understands the home care model, where the asset is your receivables, not real estate, and the ones that do compete hard for good agencies. I work with many, so I match your home healthcare agency financing to the lender that funds your goal, payroll and working capital, factoring, acquisition or startup, and I review the options with you before you commit.
Here’s the reality for a home care agency. Your single biggest challenge is timing: you pay caregivers weekly, but Medicare, Medicaid and insurers reimburse in 30 to 90 days, so the faster you grow, the tighter cash gets. A traditional bank sees an asset-light business and hesitates. Home healthcare agency financing works differently: working capital lines and invoice factoring advance cash against your reliable receivables, so payroll is covered the moment care is delivered, while SBA 7(a) handles agency acquisitions and startups. The receivables are the collateral, which is why a growing agency can fund payroll and expansion without hard assets. According to the U.S. Small Business Administration, the 7(a) program supports this kind of business acquisition and expansion.
The right structure depends on what you’re doing. Buying or starting an agency usually runs through an SBA 7(a) loan, with broader options across the SBA loan programs, and broader options live across the SBA loan programs. The payroll-versus-reimbursement gap is best matched to working capital loans and invoice factoring, where your receivables do the work. Day-to-day cash flow runs on a business line of credit that flexes with your census. Opening a brand-new agency points to startup business funding for licensing, software and recruiting. If you ever need an office, a commercial real estate loan can cover it, and vehicles or care equipment can run on equipment financing, though most home care stays lean and asset-light.
So tell me where your agency is, fighting the payroll gap, buying, or just launching, and what you need. I’ll tell you honestly which home healthcare agency financing structure fits, match you to the lender most likely to approve it, and stay with you through closing. Other healthcare providers, see my healthcare business loans hub, or compare every option on my loan programs page. Don’t Beg the Bank! Get funded instead.
Sources: U.S. Small Business Administration, 7(a) loan program and 504 loan program.
Straight Answers Before You Apply
What is home healthcare agency financing?
How do I cover payroll while waiting on Medicare?
How do I finance buying a home care agency?
What is invoice factoring for home care?
How much can I borrow for a home care agency?
What does it cost to work with you?

A Broker Who Knows Which Lenders Fund Home Care
I’m Kevin Kermeen, the nationwide commercial loan broker behind 75BizLoans.com, not a bank and not a lead-selling portal. Home care lending has its own specialist lenders who understand the payroll-versus-reimbursement gap and finance against receivables, and matching you to the right one, for working capital, factoring, acquisition or startup, is the whole point of working with me. I personally review every application, I call you directly, and I never text. For program details, see the SBA’s 7(a) loan program.
Don’t Beg the Bank!
Get Funded Instead.
Banks hand out umbrellas when the sun is shining, not when you’re weathering the storm … and they’ll leave a growing agency unable to make Friday payroll. I match you to home healthcare agency financing built for where you are … cover payroll through the reimbursement gap, factor your receivables, buy or start an agency, and get a same-day callback from a broker who reviews every deal himself.
Loan amounts, terms, rates and funding speed shown reflect typical lender programs, not guarantees, and vary by lender, creditworthiness, practice performance, collateral and structure. Home healthcare agency financing generally ranges from $10,000 to $5 million depending on the need. Invoice factoring advances and terms vary by your receivables and payer mix. *Practice acquisition and startup are commonly financed through SBA 7(a); SBA loans follow standard SBA timelines and eligibility, and “no two years of history needed” refers to acquisition loans underwritten on the target practice’s cash flow rather than the borrower’s prior business history. Credit is considered along with other factors; there is no single hard minimum FICO simply to apply, but stronger credit supports better rates and terms, and not all applicants are approved. *No upfront fees refers to fees payable to 75BizLoans.com; I am compensated by the lender at closing. Some partner lenders may require a commitment fee or deposit upon your acceptance of their term sheet; any such fee is the lender’s, is disclosed before you commit, and is separate from any compensation to me. Final eligibility, rate, term and structure are determined by the lender. This is not a commitment to lend. Same-day approvals are common when the application reaches me before 9am Arizona Time.
