The Fine Print Nobody Reads (But Should)

When a lender says "no collateral required," the first thing you should ask is: what do they require instead?

Because here's the deal — lenders don't give money away. If you're not putting up your building or your equipment, they're going to find another way to protect themselves. That means they're looking at your revenue, your time in business, your credit profile, and yes — almost always — a personal guarantee.

"No collateral" does not mean "no skin in the game."

It means the skin is different.

What "No Collateral" Actually Means

In practical terms, a no collateral business loan is an unsecured loan. There's no specific asset — no property, no equipment, no inventory — that the lender can seize if you default. Instead, approval is based on:

The lender is making a bet that your business performance will repay the loan, even without collateral backing it up.

Who Qualifies — The Real Numbers

Qualification thresholds vary by lender, but here's what most alternative lenders look at:

FactorTypical MinimumNotes
Time in business6 monthsSome lenders accept 3 months with strong revenue
Monthly revenue$10,000–$15,000Floor varies; higher revenue = better terms
Personal credit score580–620 (alt lenders) / 680+ (banks)Higher score = lower rates
Business typeMost types acceptedSome industries excluded (cannabis, gambling, etc.)
Revenue consistency2–3 months of bank statementsSeasonal businesses can still qualify

If you're at or above these floors, you're in the game. Below them, you may need to build up your profile first — or work with a broker who has access to lenders with lower minimums.

How Lenders Underwrite Without Collateral

This is where things get interesting.

Traditional banks underwrite to the asset. If you default, they get the building. That means they're conservative — they want collateral because it protects them on the downside.

Alternative lenders — including FPG — underwrite to the cash flow. They're not looking at what they can seize; they're looking at whether your revenue can service the debt.

Here's how that works in practice:

  1. Revenue analysis — Lenders pull your bank statements or connect to your accounting software. They look at average monthly deposits, not just the topline revenue number.
  2. Debt service coverage — They check whether your current revenue can handle the proposed payment on top of existing obligations. A common threshold is 1.2x coverage — meaning your revenue is at least 20% above your total debt service.
  3. Trend analysis — Are you growing? Flat? Declining? A lender who's confident in your trajectory may offer better terms than one who's just looking at your current numbers.
  4. Credit performance — Personal credit and any existing business credit still matter. But for RBF and unsecured products, the revenue picture is weighted more heavily.

Why Banks Won’t Do This

Here's the uncomfortable truth: most banks could offer unsecured business loans. They choose not to because the risk profile doesn't fit their model.

Banks operate on thin margins and heavy regulation. An unsecured loan to a business with $50k in annual revenue and a 620 credit score? That's a compliance headache and a credit committee nightmare. They'd rather lend to established businesses with real assets and pristine credit.

So they say no — or more accurately, they say "come back when you have collateral."

That gap is where alternative lenders exist. We're not doing anything magical. We're just willing to write loans that banks consider too risky for their balance sheets. The tradeoff for you is higher rates — but access to capital when you actually need it.

How FPG Structures No-Collateral Funding

FourPointOS works with a panel of alternative lenders and structures funding based on your revenue profile, not your asset list.

Here's how it works:

The goal isn't to get you any loan. It's to get you the right loan — the one your business can actually service without creating a new problem.

The Questions to Ask Before You Apply

Before you sign anything:

  1. What's the factor rate or APR? — Factor rates (e.g., 1.3x) aren't APR. Ask for the annualized cost so you can compare across products.
  2. Is there a personal guarantee? — "No collateral" often still requires a PG. Know what you're signing.
  3. What's the repayment structure? — Fixed monthly payments or revenue-based? Each behaves very differently when revenue dips.
  4. Are there prepayment penalties? — Some lenders charge you for paying off early. Find out before you commit.
  5. What's the total repayment amount? — Not the rate. The dollar amount. That's what matters.

Ready to See What You Qualify For?

If you've been turned down by a bank — or never bothered to apply because you assumed you'd be rejected — it's worth a different conversation.

Apply for funding through FourPointOS →

We'll look at your revenue, not your assets, and match you to options that actually fit your situation.