Invoice Factoring for Dialysis Center
Manu helps dialysis center owners across the United States get matched with the right lender — fast. Pre-qualify in minutes through Manu's partner application — access a 75+ lender network with real, competitive offers, no hard credit check.
How dialysis center businesses use this financing
Common uses of funds:
- Dialysis machines and water-treatment systems
- Treatment-floor and station build-out
- Reverse-osmosis and infection-control infrastructure
- EMR systems and working capital for reimbursement lag
Typical loan size: Dialysis center loans typically run $250K to $1.5M, with full multi-station builds reaching $3M.
Seasonality: Patient census and treatment volume stay steady year-round, so capital needs track facility expansion and machine replacement cycles rather than seasons.
Most common reason for decline: Dialysis centers are often declined for high equipment and infrastructure costs, slow Medicare and insurance receivables, or incomplete CMS certification.
Best-fit products for dialysis center: SBA Loans, Equipment Financing, Working Capital Loans.
Capital use cases for dialysis center businesses
- Dialysis machine fleet: Owners finance $250K–$750K through equipment financing for dialysis machines and water-treatment systems, repaid over 5–7 years as treatment census fills the floor.
- Treatment-floor build-out: A $500K–$1.5M SBA loan funds a multi-station treatment floor with reverse-osmosis infrastructure, repaid over 10 years as the patient census ramps.
- Reimbursement bridge: A $100K–$300K working capital loan covers payroll and supplies while Medicare receivables clear, repaid over 12–24 months as cash flow stabilizes.
Funding options for dialysis center businesses
Why Dialysis Center owners choose Manu
How dialysis center business loans work with Manu
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Other funding options for dialysis center businesses
Frequently asked questions
How is invoice factoring different from accounts receivable financing?
Invoice factoring means selling your unpaid invoices to a factor at a small discount — the factor pays you up to 95% upfront and then collects from your customers directly, so no debt is added to your balance sheet. Accounts receivable financing means borrowing against those same invoices while keeping ownership: you continue collecting from customers yourself and the financing shows up on your books as debt. Factoring usually costs more but gets you out of collections; A/R financing is typically cheaper and keeps customer relationships private.
What kind of business loans can Dialysis Center owners qualify for?
Through Manu's partner application, dialysis center owners can access 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. Terms are tailored to your revenue and time in business.
How fast can a Dialysis Center business get funded?
Lines of credit and merchant cash advances can fund the same day for qualifying dialysis center businesses. Small business loans and equipment financing typically fund in 1–3 business days. SBA loans take 4–10 weeks due to government underwriting.
What credit score do I need for Dialysis Center financing?
Minimum FICO depends on the product: equipment financing starts at 550, small business loans at 580, lines of credit at 600, and SBA loans at 660. Merchant cash advances and accounts receivable financing have no minimum FICO — they're underwritten on revenue and receivables instead.
Will applying hurt my credit score?
No. Pre-qualification uses a soft credit check that does not affect your credit score. A hard pull only happens if you accept a final offer from a lender.
What documents do Dialysis Center businesses need to apply?
To pre-qualify, you'll share basic business information plus your most recent 3 months of business bank statements. To finalize an offer, most lenders ask for 3–6 months of bank statements in total. Larger loans may also require tax returns or financial statements.
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: