Square’s small business financing options are limited to its Square Loan product, which offers short-term financing with revenue-based repayment, and Square Card, operated through AMEX. A business owner who needs the ability to draw funds as needed, repay, and draw again would need to seek a revolving line of credit from a different lender. Square’s loan structure makes each funding event a separate transaction. The only option for ongoing access to capital would be through its credit card.
Bluevine facilitates access to term loans through partner lenders rather than funding them directly. Businesses that qualify via Bluevine’s line-of-credit application can receive a referral to partner lenders able to provide this type of funding with limits that may go up to $500,000 with terms of up to 24 months. Rates and repayment terms are set by the partner lender, and borrowers manage the loan directly with them.4
Square is not an SBA-approved lender, nor does it facilitate any government-backed financing through partners who are. Square’s lending program centers around its proprietary short-term small business loans, which it only offers to Square sellers on its platform. Square did participate in processing SBA Paycheck Protection Program loans during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, with that program no longer in operation, Square no longer has any SBA or government-backed lending involvement.
Square offers Square Checking, a business checking account built into the Square ecosystem. Merchants with a qualifying Square Checking account can receive approved Square Loan funds instantly, rather than waiting until the next business day. From the Square Dashboard, business owners can access all of Square’s financial products, including checking accounts, payment processing, and the Square Credit Card, to monitor balances, manage cash flow, and track repayment automatically. Square’s integrated system helps merchants consolidate financial operations in one place.2