Bridge delayed receivables, fund hiring and cloud spend, and keep runway healthy. A Canadian guide to SaaS/IT services financing lenders will approve.
Software companies don’t usually “run out of work”—they run out of timing.
You ship, implement, support, and invoice… then wait 30/60/90+ days (or longer if procurement drags). Meanwhile, you’re paying:
This guide is designed for Canadian SaaS and software services firms that need funding to:
I’ll cover the real tradeoffs, the underwriter lens (the “credit brain”), and a practical checklist you can use this week.
Key point: Growth can increase cash pressure if collections lag spending.
Many software companies are profitable “on paper” but still squeezed because cash gets trapped in:
BDC’s cash flow guidance is blunt on the root issue: profitable businesses can still face a cash crunch, and improving the cash cycle often involves getting paid faster and tightening terms. bdc.ca+1
Practical translation: If your customers treat you like a bank (net-60/90), you need either (a) better terms, or (b) financing that matches the gap.
Key point: Financing is easiest when you can explain the gap clearly.
Most lenders are comfortable funding a specific, measurable gap:
That’s a financeable story because it’s measurable.
Use this as a quick sanity check (not accounting advice).
Step 1: Write down
Step 2: Estimate “excess AR”
Example:
That’s often the “bridge” a facility is solving.
Underwriter note: When you show this math, you’re speaking the lender’s language.
Key point: You’ll get better approvals (and better pricing) if you don’t mash everything into “working capital.”
This is “cash we already earned but haven’t collected.”
Typical causes:
Best fit: facilities tied to receivables (AR lending, invoice financing) or operating lines based on strong financials.
This is “cash we’re choosing to spend to grow.”
Common growth spend:
Best fit: a structured working capital facility with a clear paydown logic, or longer-horizon capital depending on the business stage.
A contrarian but defensible take: If you’re using short-term working capital to fund long-term R&D with no near-term cash payoff, you’re quietly converting “growth spend” into a refinancing problem. You don’t just need money—you need the right time horizon.
Below are the common tools, when they fit, and what underwriters watch.
Key point: Great when your reporting is clean and your cash flow is predictable.
Pros:
Cons:
Underwriter watch-outs: margin stability, customer concentration, clean statements, and reliable reporting.
Key point: When your AR is strong, AR-based facilities can scale with revenue.
Pros:
Cons:
Underwriter watch-outs: AR aging, dispute frequency, concentration (one customer = fragile), and contract enforceability.
Key point: Can fit recurring revenue models, but you must understand the repayment mechanics.
Pros:
Cons:
Rule of thumb: If repayment is too aggressive, it can increase default risk even if revenue is growing.
Key point: Don’t fund laptops, servers, and office/IT gear out of precious operating cash if you don’t have to.
Software companies often overlook that they still have financeable assets:
Why leasing helps:
Mehmi’s typical role: we’re brought in when a company wants to preserve runway by leasing the “stuff” instead of draining cash, while keeping the working capital solution targeted to the cash gap.
Key point: Incentives can help, but timing matters—don’t budget future credits as if they’re cash today.
Many Canadian software companies rely on SR&ED planning in their broader finance strategy. CRA outlines SR&ED as a program where eligible businesses can claim deductions and earn investment tax credits (ITCs). Canada
Practical finance takeaway: Treat SR&ED as a future inflow with uncertainty and timing variability—not as payroll money you “already have.” Underwriters prefer conservative assumptions here.
Key point: Tax deadlines don’t care about your collection cycle.
CRA states that if your reporting period is monthly or quarterly, your GST/HST filing and payment deadline is one month after the end of the reporting period. Canada
Why it matters for software companies:
Simple control: move GST/HST collected into a separate account weekly so it never becomes “fake cash.”
Key point: Approvals aren’t just about revenue—they’re about risk, predictability, and controls.
Do your numbers match your story?
Lenders look for:
Can you service the facility from cash flow?
In software, capacity is shaped by:
Do you have cushion?
Capital can mean:
Software is intangible, but not “zero collateral.”
Collateral signals include:
What’s happening in the market and rate environment?
Financing costs and lender risk appetite are influenced by rates. The Bank of Canada held the target for the overnight rate at 2.25% on December 10, 2025. Bank of Canada
That context matters because it affects pricing and risk tolerance across lenders.
Key point: Lenders think in probability and recoverability.
Operator takeaway: You can improve your “financeability” by lowering PD (controls + forecasting) and lowering LGD (clean AR + documented deliverables).
Key point: If you know what lenders require, you can avoid last-minute surprises.
Common examples:
Common examples:
Monitoring in reality: lenders watch early warning signals—declining deposits, AR aging creep, rising disputes, customer concentration changes, and sudden new liabilities—long before a missed payment.
Key point: Speed comes from clarity, not pressure.
Here’s a practical checklist most software lenders will ask for:
Underwriter tip: If you’re weak in one area (e.g., concentration), offset it with stronger controls and transparency.
Key point: The best plan is layered, not “one product solves everything.”
Here’s a clean, lender-friendly approach:
This is the kind of structure Mehmi aims for when advising: protect the operating account, keep financing aligned to what it’s funding, and avoid stacking products that compete for the same dollars.
Business: Canadian software services + light SaaS product (B2B)
Revenue: ~$3.6M annual run rate, growing
Problem: Landed two enterprise clients with net-60 terms and milestone acceptance. DSO drifted to ~80 days during onboarding. Payroll and cloud spend climbed as the team staffed delivery.
What nearly broke cash flow:
What worked (lender-friendly structure):
Result: The company stabilized payroll and cloud spend through onboarding, avoided stacking expensive products, and improved approval odds for future facilities by tightening AR discipline.
Lesson: In software, financing is often “AR hygiene + structure,” not just “more capital.”
Key point: Most declines are preventable.
Fix: tighten acceptance criteria, keep documentation, invoice immediately, and escalate disputes early.
Fix: disclose it, show diversification plan, and size the facility conservatively.
Fix: build a 13-week forecast (simple is fine) and update weekly.
Fix: one clear facility with an exit/paydown plan beats multiple daily-remittance obligations.
Calm CTA: If you want, Mehmi can review your AR aging, DSO gap, and equipment plan and suggest a financing structure that protects runway—especially when growth is real but cash timing is lagging.
Usually an AR-focused facility (or an operating line if you qualify) paired with tighter invoicing and acceptance documentation. The cleaner your AR, the more financeable the gap.
Sometimes, yes—especially with predictable recurring revenue, strong reporting, and disciplined cash management. Expect tighter covenants and reporting requirements compared to asset-heavy businesses.
CRA notes monthly/quarterly filers generally have a filing and payment deadline one month after the end of the reporting period. Canada
If AR is delayed, remittance timing can create a squeeze—separate GST/HST funds weekly.
Often no. Leasing-first for equipment can preserve runway and keep AR facilities focused on AR timing—especially during growth hiring.
It can support overall planning because SR&ED may provide deductions and investment tax credits for eligible work, per CRA’s program overview. Canada
But don’t treat future SR&ED outcomes as guaranteed cash for near-term payroll.
Bank behaviour (NSFs), AR aging, disputes, concentration changes, cash balance trends, and compliance with reporting covenants—often before any missed payment occurs.