Business Insights

What Is Working Capital? A Small Business Owner’s Complete Guide to Getting the Funding You Need

Key Takeaways

  • Working capital is your business’s financial breathing room, calculated as current assets minus current liabilities, it covers day-to-day expenses like payroll, inventory, and rent
  • The SBA defines working capital more narrowly than standard accounting— SBA loans designated for working capital can only be used for operating costs like rent, payroll, insurance, and professional fees, not equipment or real estate
  • Lenders focus primarily on your DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio), not just your working capital balance
  • A DSCR of at least 1.1–1.25 is typically required, as it shows that your business generates enough cash flow to cover all debt
  • Insufficient cash flow (especially for seasonal businesses) can force you to miss bulk purchase deals, turn down large orders, or fail to seize growth opportunities, even if your business is technically profitable
  • SBA term loans offer the best rates and longest terms but take longer to fund, while lines of credit and short-term loans offer more speed but at higher costs or shorter repayment windows.
  • NEWITY funds SBA loans three times faster than the national average so you don’t have to trade quality for efficiency

The Cash That Keeps Your Business Running

You’ve got customers. You’ve got revenue. You’ve got a business you’ve worked hard to build.

But you’ve also got payroll due Friday, a supplier invoice that can’t wait, and a slow month sitting between you and that next big order.

That gap between what’s coming in and what’s going out is a working capital problem.

Rising costs and uneven cash flow were in the top three financial challenges for small businesses in 2024, and 65% of small business owners who were approved for financing were doing so specifically to cover working capital needs.

If you’re in a similar position, you have more options than you might think.

This guide will walk you through exactly what working capital means, why it matters, how lenders (including the SBA) look at it, and how a small business loan can help you get more of it.

What Is Working Capital?

Working capital is the money your business has available to cover its day-to-day operating expenses and short-term financial obligations.

Think of it as your financial breathing room. It’s what lets you pay your employees this week, keep the lights on, restock inventory before a busy season, and cover an unexpected repair, all without dipping into personal savings or putting the business at risk.

Working Capital = Current Assets − Current Liabilities

Current assets are anything your business owns that can be converted to cash within the next 12 months:
  • Cash and cash equivalents
  • Accounts receivable (money customers owe you)
  • Inventory
  • Prepaid expenses
Current liabilities are financial obligations your business owes within the next 12 months:
  • Accounts payable (money you owe suppliers)
  • Short-term loan payments
  • Payroll obligations
  • Rent, utilities, and other recurring expenses
Example: If your business has $150,000 in current assets and $80,000 in current liabilities, your working capital is $70,000.

A positive working capital number means you can cover your near-term obligations with room to spare. A negative number is a warning sign — your business may struggle to meet its financial commitments without outside help.

How the SBA Defines Working Capital

Here’s something that trips up a lot of small business owners when applying for SBA financing: the SBA defines “working capital” differently than the standard accounting definition.

In traditional accounting terms, working capital can include inventory purchases, equipment, and paying down accounts payable. These are all things that improve your balance sheet.

However, when “working capital” is referred to in the context of use cases for an SBA loan, here is what is what that encompasses:
  • Rent and utilities
  • Payroll and benefits
  • Insurance premiums
  • Professional service fees
  • Permits and licenses related to your loan project
  • Other recurring operating costs
What’s not included in the SBA’s working capital component?
  • Equipment
  • Real estate
  • Investment
When you are approved for a working capital loan, it’s important to understand exactly what the allowable use cases are for those funds.

What Lenders Actually Look At: DSCR

Dollar figures alone don’t tell the whole story. $50,000 in working capital means very different things to a two-person consultancy versus a manufacturing operation with a $5 million payroll.

That’s why when evaluating your loan application, lenders focus less on your working capital balance in isolation and more on your Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) — the number that tells them whether your business generates enough cash flow to comfortably repay what you’re asking to borrow.

DSCR = Net Operating Income ÷ Total Debt Service

Your net operating income is your revenue minus operating expenses (before interest and taxes). Your total debt service is the sum of all principal and interest payments due in a given year, including the new loan you’re applying for.

Here’s how lenders interpret your DSCR:
DSCR
What It Means
Below 1.0
Danger zone — your business doesn’t generate enough income to cover its debt. Approval is unlikely without strong compensating factors.
1.0-1.09
Borderline — you can cover debt payments, but there’s no cushion.
1.1-1.25
Acceptable — this is the minimum threshold most SBA lenders require.
1.25 +
Healthy — you have meaningful cash flow above and beyond your debt obligations.
1.35+
Strong — lenders view this as low risk and it can improve your terms.
Most SBA lenders require a minimum DSCR of 1.1 to 1.25.

The working capital ratio (current assets ÷ current liabilities) is still useful, as lenders will look at it as a secondary measure of short-term liquidity, but DSCR is the primary lens through which your loan request will be evaluated.

Lenders want to know that the business can pay them back, and DSCR is the most direct measure of that ability.
Working capital is a daily operational reality. Here’s what having (or not having) adequate working capital looks like in the real world:

Cash Flow Gaps Are Normal — But Dangerous Without Working Capital

Most small businesses experience irregular cash flow. Seasonal businesses such as landscapers, retailers, contractors, and caterers may have three phenomenal months followed by a slow quarter. Product-based businesses often have to spend money on inventory weeks or months before customers pay. Service businesses wait on clients to pay invoices.

That lag between when you spend and when you collect is called the cash conversion cycle, and it’s the root cause of most working capital shortfalls. Even profitable businesses can run out of cash if their cycle is long enough.

Missed Opportunities Cost More Than You Think

When a large customer wants to place an order you can’t afford to fulfill, or a supplier offers a bulk pricing deal you can’t take advantage of, or a competitor becomes available for acquisition and you don’t have the capital to move, these are the invisible costs of insufficient working capital.

SBA Working Capital Loans vs. Other Options: How to Choose

SBA Working Capital Term Loan
Line of Credit
Short-Term Loan
Best For
Payroll, new projects, bridging slow seasons
Ongoing, variable cash flow gaps
Immediate, one-time shortfall
Repayment Term
Up to 10 years
Revolving
3-18 months
Interest Rate
Low
Low-Medium
Higher
Funding Speed
Weeks
Days-Weeks
24-48 Hours
For most established small businesses with solid financials, SBA financing offers the best combination of loan size, interest rate, and repayment flexibility.

The tradeoff is time, as SBA loans tend to take longer to process than online alternatives. However, NEWITY closes SBA loans 3x faster than the national average so you don’t need to forsake good terms for speedy capital.

Ready to Explore Your Working Capital Options?

Apply in just 10 minutes to find out how much you could qualify for!

Find Out How Much You Could Qualify For Today!

NEWITY LLC and its affiliates do not provide tax, legal or accounting advice. This material has been prepared for informational purposes only, and is not intended to provide, and should not be relied on for, tax, legal or accounting advice. You should consult your own tax, legal and accounting advisors before engaging in any transaction.

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To qualify for an SBA 7(a) small business loan, your business must be:

  1. U.S.-based and operated
  2. Owner supported / owner funded
  3. Eligible per the SBA’s requirements

Your loan amount will determined by the business’ average annual revenue, FICO score, and years in business