2 min read
What it means
A merchant cash advance (MCA) advances a lump sum that you repay by handing over an agreed slice of each day's card sales until a fixed total is cleared. Because repayment tracks takings, quiet days cost less — but the total is set by a factor rate, not an interest rate, and the effective cost is often steep.
When to be cautious
An MCA suits card-heavy businesses (retail, hospitality) wanting repayment that flexes with trade. The catch is cost: convert the factor rate to a true annual figure with the MCA calculator before committing, because it frequently works out dearer than a business loan. Compare the two on total repayable, and see MCA vs a business loan.
What it means for you
Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally, and takes no personal guarantee. See business loans or apply online.
Frequently asked questions
Is a merchant cash advance cheap?
Usually not, once you convert the factor rate to an effective annual cost. The flexible repayment is convenient, but you often pay a premium for it. Always compare the total repayable against a standard loan.
Who is a merchant cash advance for?
Businesses with steady card takings that value repayment flexing with sales — cafés, shops, salons. If your income is not card-based or you want the lowest cost, a term loan usually serves better.
Related reading

What is a merchant cash advance?
A merchant cash advance (MCA) provides a lump sum of working capital repaid automatically as a fixed…
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What does a factor rate mean?
A factor rate is a multiplier applied to the amount you borrow — a factor of 1.2 means you repay 120% of the…
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What is a merchant cash advance?
A merchant cash advance (MCA) is a form of business finance where a provider gives your company a lump sum up…
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Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally — short-term working capital with no personal guarantee. See what your business could access.