Construction Loans for Title Company in Vermont
Manu helps Vermont title company owners get matched with the right lender — fast. Vermont's small businesses are concentrated in food and beverage, tourism, agriculture, and outdoor recreation, with strong activity around Burlington and Stowe. Pre-qualify in minutes through Manu's partner application — our 75+ lender network includes partners licensed to fund in Vermont, no hard credit check.
How Vermont title company businesses use this financing
Common uses of funds:
- Title search software, document management, and closing platforms
- E&O and fidelity coverage plus title-plant access fees
- Escrow trust accounting systems and remote online notarization tools
- Working capital for payroll between high-volume closing cycles
Typical loan size: Most title companies borrow $25K–$250K for technology and staffing, while agency acquisitions or new branch openings can reach $500K–$1.5M.
Seasonality: Closing volume tracks the housing market, peaking in spring and summer and falling sharply in winter and whenever mortgage rates spike, making revenue interest-rate sensitive.
Most common reason for decline: Lenders decline title shops with thin operating history, commingled escrow concerns, or revenue that has collapsed alongside a refinance slowdown.
Best-fit products for title company owners in Vermont: Lines of Credit, Working Capital Loans, SBA Loans.
Capital use cases for title company businesses in Vermont
- Closing platform upgrade: A title company borrows $40K–$120K via equipment financing for new title-search, escrow accounting, and remote online notarization software, repaid over 3–5 years as faster closings raise capacity.
- Refi-slowdown working capital: A $50K–$200K line of credit covers payroll and title-plant fees through a winter or rate-driven closing slump, drawn and repaid as spring purchase volume rebounds.
- Agency acquisition: An owner uses a $500K–$1.5M SBA loan to acquire a competing title agency, repaying over 10 years as the combined book of closings backs the debt.
Loan options for Title Company businesses in Vermont
Small Business Loans
Business Line of Credit
Equipment Financing
SBA Loans (7(a) & 504)
Merchant Cash Advance
Accounts Receivable Financing
Inventory Line of Credit
Why Vermont Title Company owners choose Manu
Lenders licensed in Vermont
Manu's 75+ lender network includes banks, credit unions, online lenders, and SBA-preferred lenders that fund Vermont businesses. You only see offers from lenders cleared to lend in your state.
Built for Vermont's small business base
Vermont is home to roughly 78,000 small businesses serving 650,000 residents. We've structured our funnel for the kinds of title company operators that thrive in Burlington, Essex, and beyond.
SBA-friendly
The Vermont District Office in Montpelier oversees SBA 7(a), 504, and microloan activity for Vermont. Our SBA-preferred lenders can move title company files through faster than going to a single bank branch.
No hard credit pull
Pre-qualify in about 3 minutes without affecting your credit score. A hard pull only happens if you accept a final offer.
Ready to fund your Vermont title company business?
Apply in minutes. Get matched with lenders that fund title company businesses in Vermont.
See My OffersOther funding options for title company businesses in Vermont
Other industries we fund in Vermont
Frequently asked questions
What business loans are available to Title Company owners in Vermont?
Vermont title company owners can qualify through Manu for small business loans ($10K–$10M), SBA 7(a) and 504 loans ($50K–$5M), business lines of credit, equipment financing, merchant cash advances, accounts receivable financing, and inventory lines. We work with lenders licensed to fund in Vermont.
How fast can a Title Company business in Vermont get funded?
Lines of credit and merchant cash advances can fund the same day for qualifying Vermont title company businesses. Small business loans and equipment financing typically wire in 1–3 business days. SBA loans take 4–10 weeks because of government underwriting.
Are there Vermont-specific SBA programs title company owners should know about?
Yes. The Vermont District Office in Montpelier oversees SBA 7(a), 504, and microloan programs for Vermont small businesses, with home-grown lender partners that often add their own Vermont-focused incentives. Manu's network includes SBA-preferred lenders that fund in Vermont.
What credit score does a Vermont title company business need?
Minimum FICO depends on the product, not the state: equipment financing starts at 550, small business loans at 580, lines of credit at 600, and SBA loans at 660. Merchant cash advances and A/R financing have no minimum FICO when revenue is strong.
Will applying for a Vermont title company loan hurt my credit?
No. Pre-qualification uses a soft credit pull that does not affect your score. A hard pull only happens if you accept a final offer from a lender.
Sources & references
Loan-product criteria, funding-speed ranges, and credit-score thresholds on this page are validated against current lender requirements and the following primary sources: