Staffing Recruiting Firm Financing Nationwide, Payroll Funding, Invoice Factoring and Acquisition

👔 Financing Built for Staffing and Recruiting Firms
Staffing and Recruiting Firm Financing Make Payroll. Take Every Order.
Don’t Beg the Bank!
☂️ Banks hand out umbrellas when the sun is shining, not when you’re weathering the storm.
✔ Payroll funding · Invoice factoring · Acquisition · SBA 7(a) · All 50 states

I’m Kevin Kermeen, a nationwide commercial loan broker, not a bank. Staffing recruiting firm financing exists to solve the most punishing payroll gap in professional services: you pay your temps and contractors every week, but your clients pay you on net 30, 60, even 90 day terms. Land a big order and the gap gets worse, because more placements mean more payroll due now against invoices that will not be paid for weeks. I match you to capital built precisely for this… payroll funding and invoice factoring that advance cash against your staffing receivables so you can always make payroll and take the next order, plus a line of credit or working capital, and SBA 7(a) financing to acquire another firm or fund a buyout. Temp, direct-hire, executive search, whatever your model, I match you to lenders who fund staffing firms.

$10K to $5M Conventional real estate All 50 states No upfront fees*
Staffing and recruiting firm financing nationwide, payroll funding, invoice factoring and acquisition, with Kevin Kermeen, commercial loan broker Staffing recruiting firm financing nationwide, payroll funding and factoring STAFFING FIRM SNAPSHOT Make payroll, take orders 👔 Funding Range $10K to $5M* Weekly Payroll Funded Client Net 60 Equipment Financing Coverage All 50 States One desk or the whole firm, I match it
$10K to $5M*
Funding Range
SBA 7(a)
Acquisition Workhorse
No 2-Yr
History Needed*
All 50
States
What It Funds

Staffing Recruiting Firm Financing for Every Need a Firm Has

Whether you’re making weekly payroll against slow client invoices, scaling to take a bigger contract, acquiring another firm, or opening a new desk, there’s a structure built for it. Here’s what staffing recruiting firm financing commonly covers.

🏷️

Payroll Funding

Advance cash against your staffing invoices so you can always pay temps and contractors weekly, even when clients pay on net 60.

🚀

Invoice Factoring

Sell your staffing receivables for cash today, the industry-standard way to fund growth without waiting out long client terms.

⚖️

Partner Buy-In and Buyout

Fund a new partner buying into the firm, or buy out a founder, through SBA 7(a) without draining cash.

🤝

Acquire or Roll Up a Firm

Buy another staffing or recruiting firm to add clients, recruiters and contract revenue in one move.

🔨

Open a New Desk or Vertical

Launch a new recruiting desk, enter a new industry vertical, or open a second office, with growth capital.

💵

ATS, CRM and Build-Out

Applicant-tracking and CRM software, job-board subscriptions and office build-out a modern staffing firm runs on, on equipment terms.

A Real Deal I Closed

A Staffing Firm Doubled Its Headcount on a New Contract After Payroll Funding Covered the Gap

A staffing firm landed a contract that would double its placed headcount, a career-making win. But it meant paying twice as many contractors every week while waiting net 60 to be paid by the client, and its bank would not extend a line big enough to carry that payroll gap. Without the cash, the firm could not staff the contract it had just won.

They called me. I matched the firm to payroll funding through invoice factoring, which advanced cash against each week’s staffing invoices the moment they were issued, so payroll was always covered while the client paid on its own schedule. The firm staffed the contract in full, never missed a payroll, and the facility scaled automatically as it placed more people.

That’s what the right staffing-firm match looks like. Don’t Beg the Bank! Get funded instead.

SBA 7(a)
Acquisition
Cash Flow
Underwritten
Day One
Profitable
Your Funding Paths

Staffing Recruiting Firm Financing, the Right Tool for Each Need

Staffing recruiting firm financing isn’t one product. The weekly-payroll-versus-net-60 gap wants payroll funding or factoring; an acquisition or buyout wants SBA 7(a). Here are the paths. I match you to the one that fits, tap any to explore it.

Do You Qualify?

Qualifying for Staffing Recruiting Firm Financing

Staffing firms are among the easiest professional businesses to fund for growth, because the financing is secured by your client invoices, not your assets. Payroll funding and factoring advance against creditworthy clients’ receivables, so even a young, fast-growing firm with no hard collateral qualifies; for an acquisition or buyout, SBA 7(a) underwrites the firm’s revenue. The key to staffing recruiting firm financing is the quality of your clients who owe the invoices, more than your own balance sheet. I qualify deals honestly.

✅ What helps you qualify

  • An operating staffing or recruiting firm with creditworthy clients and invoices to fund against.
  • A solid cash flow and decent credit, the foundation an SBA acquisition lender wants.
  • A target firm with solid, documented cash flow and verifiable client retention.
  • A down payment or contribution, which a parent or family member can help with.

💡 Straight talk

  • Weekly payroll runs on payroll funding or factoring, secured by your client invoices, not real estate.
  • Acquisitions and partner buyouts run on SBA 7(a), underwritten on the firm’s revenue.
  • Credit is flexible, there’s no single hard FICO floor; stronger credit means better terms.
  • A past bank rejection does not disqualify you; the deal and your credit matter more.

Get Your Staffing Firm Financing Options

A quick, no-pressure pre-qualification. I personally review every submission, no call center, no junior rep.

1 · Your Goal
2 · You
3 · Contact

🔒 100% confidential. I never sell your information; I only share it with the partner lender(s) you’ve approved me to send it to. I call you directly, I never text. No upfront fees to me; I’m paid by the lender at closing.* Some partner lenders may require a commitment deposit when you accept their term sheet.

Got it. I’m on it.

Your staffing firm 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.

Need to talk now? Call me at (480) 915-8690
Rather talk first? 📞 Call Kevin (480) 915-8690 7 days a week · Arizona Time
Real Deals · Just Funded

Recent Staffing Recruiting Firm Financing From My Desk

A snapshot of the staffing and recruiting firm financing I match to lenders nationwide, firm by firm. Every firm and deal is different, yours starts with a conversation.

Just Funded

Staffing Recruiting Firm Financing · Payroll Funding

A staffing firm used payroll funding to double its headcount on a net-60 contract without missing a payroll.

Just Funded

Factoring Facility

A recruiting firm set up an invoice-factoring facility that scaled automatically as it placed more contractors.

Just Funded

Firm Roll-Up

A staffing firm acquired a competitor in a new vertical with SBA 7(a), adding clients and recruiters.

Why Staffing Firms Choose Me

How I Match Staffing Recruiting Firm Financing to the Right Lender

Staffing cash flow is a textbook factoring and payroll-funding story, and the right lenders specialize in it. I work with many, so I match your staffing recruiting firm financing to one who funds against staffing receivables, usually payroll funding or invoice factoring for the weekly-payroll gap, working capital for a ramp, and SBA 7(a) for an acquisition or buyout, and I review the options with you before you commit.

Here’s the reality of running a staffing or recruiting firm, and the cash trap that punishes growth. You pay your placed temps and contractors every week, on the dot, but your clients pay your invoices on net 30, 60 or even 90 day terms. The faster you grow, the worse the gap gets, because every new placement adds payroll due now against an invoice that will not be paid for weeks, and a single large contract can outrun a firm’s cash entirely. A conventional bank sees a young, asset-light company and caps the line. The industry-standard fix is payroll funding through invoice factoring: a lender advances cash against your staffing invoices the moment they are issued, so payroll is always covered and the facility scales automatically as you place more people, underwritten on the creditworthiness of your clients rather than your own balance sheet. Separately, acquiring or rolling up another firm, or funding a partner buyout, runs through SBA 7(a) financing, which underwrites the firm’s revenue. Temporary and contract staffing, direct-hire and permanent placement, executive search, HR consulting, payroll and benefits administration, employee training and career coaching firms all finance the same way, around receivables and payroll. According to the U.S. Small Business Administration, its 7(a) program can fund a change of business ownership.

The right structure depends on the deal size and whether a seller note or conventional layer belongs in the structure.SBA 7(a) loan, and broader options live across the SBA loan programs. The weekly-payroll-versus-slow-client gap runs on invoice factoring or a business line of credit and working capital, an acquisition or buyout runs on an SBA 7(a) loan, and applicant-tracking software and build-out runs on equipment financing. If you want to own the building, an SBA 504 loan or commercial real estate loan gives long-term, fixed-rate terms. A brand-mandated renovation points to professional services working capital, and the ramp-up months are covered by working capital loans or a business line of credit.

So tell me what your firm needs, payroll funding to cover the gap, factoring to scale, a firm to acquire, or a partner buyout, and I’ll tell you honestly which staffing recruiting firm financing fits and match you to a lender who funds against staffing receivables. To buy a whole firm specifically, see my practice acquisition financing. For other firm financing, see my professional services financing 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.

Staffing Firm Financing FAQ

Straight Answers Before You Apply

What is staffing recruiting firm financing?
Staffing recruiting firm financing is funding built around the gap between weekly payroll and slow-paying clients. Its signature tool is payroll funding through invoice factoring: a lender advances cash against your staffing invoices the moment they issue, so you can always pay temps and contractors weekly even when clients pay on net 60, and the facility scales automatically as you place more people. It also covers working capital for a ramp and SBA 7(a) financing for acquisitions and partner buyouts. Temp and contract staffing, direct-hire placement, executive search and HR consulting firms all qualify. I match you to lenders who fund staffing receivables. Staffing recruiting firm financing is what I do.
How does payroll funding work for a staffing firm?
Payroll funding solves the defining cash-flow problem in staffing: you pay temps and contractors weekly, but clients pay on net 30 to 90. It works through invoice factoring, when you issue a staffing invoice, the lender advances you most of its value immediately, typically a high percentage, so the cash is in hand to cover that week’s payroll, and you receive the balance, minus a fee, when the client pays. It is not a loan against your assets, it is an advance against money creditworthy clients already owe you, so it scales with your billings and works for fast-growing, asset-light firms. The facility grows automatically as you place more people. I match you to a payroll-funding partner whose rates and terms fit your client base.
Can I get financing if my firm is young and has no assets?
Yes, and this is exactly why payroll funding and factoring dominate the staffing industry. These facilities are secured by your client invoices, not by hard assets or a long balance-sheet history, so the lender underwrites the creditworthiness of the clients who owe you, more than your own age or collateral. A brand-new staffing firm with solid, creditworthy clients can often qualify for payroll funding when a traditional bank loan would be out of reach. As you grow and place more people, the funding scales with you. The quality of your client base is the main thing that matters. I match you to a lender comfortable with your stage and your clients.
What kinds of staffing firms do you finance?
Staffing and recruiting firms of every model and size, including temporary and contract staffing agencies, direct-hire and permanent placement firms, executive search firms, IT, healthcare, industrial and professional staffing specialists, and related HR consulting, payroll and benefits administration, employee training and career coaching businesses, from new agencies to multi-office firms. Most come for payroll funding and factoring, working capital to scale, acquisitions, or partner buyouts. Whatever your specialty, the financing is built around your client invoices and receivables rather than hard collateral. I match you to a lender that understands staffing payroll and billing.
Can I finance buying or rolling up another staffing firm?
Yes. Acquiring another staffing or recruiting firm, buying a book of client accounts, or rolling up a competitor in a new vertical all run through SBA 7(a) financing, which underwrites the target’s revenue and client relationships rather than demanding hard collateral, with a low down payment and a long term. It works whether you are a single-desk firm absorbing a small competitor or a larger agency rolling up several. A seller note can be layered in on larger deals, and payroll funding can be set up alongside it to carry the combined payroll. For the full picture of buying a firm across any profession, see my practice acquisition financing page. I match you to a lender active in staffing firm acquisitions and structure the deal with you.
What does it cost to work with you?
Nothing up front to me. I am paid by the lender at closing, no application fees and no broker fees out of pocket. Some partner lenders may require a commitment deposit when you accept their term sheet, which is separate from any fee to me and disclosed before you commit. Don’t Beg the Bank! Let me match your staffing recruiting firm financing to the right lender.
Kevin Kermeen, nationwide commercial loan advisor at 75BizLoans.com
Why Work With Me

A Broker Who Understands Staffing Payroll

I’m Kevin Kermeen, the nationwide commercial loan broker behind 75BizLoans.com, not a bank and not a lead-selling portal. A conventional bank sees a fast-growing, asset-light staffing firm and stops reading. I work with payroll-funding and factoring lenders who advance against your client invoices so payroll is always covered, and SBA 7(a) lenders who fund acquisitions and buyouts, and matching you to the right staffing recruiting firm financing 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.

Take Every Order.
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 deny the payroll funding that would let you staff the contract that doubles your firm. I match you to staffing recruiting firm financing built around your real problem … payroll funding and invoice factoring so you can always make payroll and take the next order, plus working capital and SBA 7(a) for acquisitions and buyouts. Temp, direct-hire, executive search, whatever your model. Get a same-day callback from a broker who reviews every deal himself.

Staffing and recruiting firm financing covers payroll funding, invoice factoring, business lines of credit, working capital, SBA 7(a) loans and equipment financing. Payroll funding and factoring are underwritten on your client invoices and the creditworthiness of the clients who owe them, not your own assets; factoring advances a percentage of invoice value and charges a fee. SBA 7(a) loans are government-backed, generally capped at $5 million, with their own eligibility, terms and timelines set by the SBA, and fund acquisitions and partner buyouts; a seller note may be layered in. SBA 504 applies only to an owner-occupied office purchase. Amounts, rates, advance rates, terms and funding timelines vary by lender, the firm and the use of funds; all figures are illustrative and not a commitment to lend. No upfront fees refers to fees payable to 75BizLoans.com; I am paid by the lender at closing. Some partner lenders may require a commitment deposit when you accept their term sheet.

⚡ APPLY NOW