Use Cases

What to Use a Business Line of Credit For

Match the right financing to the job you actually need done.

By Marcus Delaney, former commercial loan officer · Updated June 2026 · 4 sources

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A line of credit shines for one specific job: covering short-term, recurring, or unpredictable gaps where you don’t know the exact amount or timing up front. You draw what you need, pay interest only on that, and pay it back as the cash comes in. The mistake I saw most often was using revolving credit for things that should have been a fixed-term loan — buying a building, funding a one-time equipment purchase — and getting squeezed when the balance never went down.

This section walks through the situations a line of credit is genuinely built for, plus the honest caveats on each. No invented costs here; what a draw actually costs you depends on your rate and how long you carry the balance, which we cover in the rates section.

What’s in this section

Each use-case page covers when a line of credit is the right call, how the math tends to work, and the cheaper or smarter alternative when it isn’t.

Smoothing seasonal cash flow

The classic fit. Bridge the off-season when revenue dips but rent, payroll, and prep costs don’t — draw in the lean months, repay when the busy season lands.

Smoothing seasonal cash flow →

Financing inventory

Stock up before a peak without draining your cash reserves. How lenders view inventory, when a line beats inventory financing, and how to size your draw.

Financing inventory →

Covering payroll through a gap

Make payroll when a big receivable is late or a slow week hits. Honest about when borrowing to cover payroll is a smart bridge versus a warning sign.

Covering payroll →

Funding expansion and growth

Open a second location, build out, or hire ahead of demand. Where a line of credit and a term loan genuinely compete — and which fits a flexible ramp.

Funding expansion →

Handling emergencies and unexpected costs

The highest-pain, highest-risk use — and the one merchant cash advance brokers target hardest. Why a pre-arranged line beats scrambling for “fast cash.”

Emergencies and unexpected costs →

Real estate and property use cases

And why a line of credit often isn’t the right tool here. When a property purchase or build-out calls for a different, asset-secured product instead.

Real estate use cases →

Lines of credit by industry

Industry-specific use cases. The cash-flow shape looks different in construction, restaurants, retail, trucking, and e-commerce — see how your vertical borrows.

Lines of credit by industry →

A quick gut check

If your need is one-time, large, and has a fixed amount — a line of credit is usually the wrong fit, and a term loan or SBA loan costs less over time. If your need is recurring, variable, or you simply want a safety net you only pay for when you tap it — that’s exactly what revolving credit is for. The vs. alternatives comparison lays out the trade-offs side by side.

When the use-case fits and you’re ready

Once you know a line of credit is the right tool for your situation, the next step is finding a lender that fits your business profile. Check eligibility, then compare lenders — or let a marketplace match one application to several at once. For the full picture of how the product works, see how a business line of credit works.

The lowest-friction way to see your real options is one marketplace application: Lendio matches a single form to multiple lenders, so you can compare what you may qualify for without shopping it lender by lender.

Get Funded Today

Lendio is a marketplace, not a lender. Checking your options uses a soft credit pull that does not affect your score; if you accept an offer, a matched lender may run a hard pull at underwriting, only with your consent (per BizBee Funding, 2026).


By Marcus Delaney, former commercial loan officer. BizBee is informational and independent. We are not a lender and do not broker loans. Some links are affiliate links — see How We Make Money.