General Contractor Working Capital in Ohio

Ohio GCs managing freeze-thaw delays, ODOT bids, and slow municipal pay cycles use working capital to keep crews moving year-round.

Running commercial work in Ohio means navigating a job calendar that hard-stops every winter. From mid-November through early March, concrete pours, foundation work, and exterior envelope projects either shut down entirely or require costly cold-weather protection measures — heated enclosures, accelerated admixtures, extended cure schedules — that eat margin and push closeout dates back. Municipal and institutional owners in Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati run on fiscal calendars that don't flex for freeze-thaw delays, which means pay applications get approved on their schedule, not yours. Working capital is how we bridge that gap without slowing payroll or losing our subs to the next guy who can write a check faster.

Who's Pulling Working Capital in Ohio

The typical Ohio GC using working capital is running $1.5M–$8M in annual revenue, carrying two to six active projects, and working in one of three lanes: public institutional work (schools, county buildings, ODOT-adjacent site work), light commercial new construction in the Columbus or Cleveland suburbs, or gut-rehab and adaptive-reuse in urban cores like Tremont, Over-the-Rhine, or Short North. Deal sizes tend to cluster between $400K and $3M per contract — large enough that a single slow-pay owner creates a real cash problem, small enough that the business doesn't have a CFO managing float.

HVAC and mechanical subcontractors are also a common buyer profile here, particularly in Northeast Ohio where industrial facility upgrades and food-processing plant retrofits run year-round. Those crews keep significant material inventory — sheet metal, refrigerant, controls equipment — and need capital on hand before the PO arrives.

What Ohio Actually Puts on Your Plate

Ohio's building code landscape is layered. The state adopted the 2017 Ohio Building Code (OBC), which is built on IBC foundations but carries Ohio-specific amendments — including stricter requirements around energy code compliance (Ohio follows a modified IECC) and accessibility under Ohio's own Chapter 11 amendments. Permit timelines vary meaningfully by jurisdiction: Franklin County projects in Columbus can move in three to four weeks for standard commercial permits; Cuyahoga County work in Cleveland's urban renewal zones often runs six to ten weeks, especially when historic preservation review or environmental site assessment is required.

Ohio's prevailing wage law applies to public improvements and adds a documentation and certified payroll burden that many GCs underestimate when budgeting administrative overhead. If you're bidding ODOT work or any project touching state funding, prevailing wage compliance is non-negotiable and adds real cost that has to be cash-flowed before reimbursement. Ohio's Prompt Payment Act sets a 10-day owner-to-GC and 10-day GC-to-sub payment window after funds are received, but the receive-date trigger on public work can trail invoice submission by 30 days or more.

How Working Capital Actually Works for Ohio Contractors

Working capital for Ohio GCs generally comes in one of three structures. A revolving line of credit is the most flexible — draw what you need, repay as receivables clear, draw again. Lines typically run $100K–$750K for contractors in our revenue range, with rates in the 8.5–11% APR range for well-qualified borrowers through bank or SBA channels. Term loans are better when you have a specific, defined need — a large material purchase for a project starting in 60 days, or a piece of equipment you're buying outright to avoid a rental line item. Terms of 12–36 months are common; SBA 7(a) working capital loans can extend to 10 years but that's usually reserved for real estate-adjacent uses.

In practice, Ohio contractors use working capital for: locking in material pricing before a scheduled pour (lumber, structural steel, and insulation all price-spike ahead of the spring season), covering certified payroll on prevailing wage jobs before the owner pay cycle closes, carrying the float on bonded public projects where retainage holds can tie up 5–10% of contract value for 90 days post-substantial completion, and occasionally bridging a crew between projects when work overlaps.

For faster draws — emergency material buys, a sub threatening to walk off a job — alternative lenders can fund in 24–72 hours. Merchant cash advance products technically qualify but carry APR equivalents of 80–150%, which will wreck the margin on any job where you're already holding retainage. We avoid those unless absolutely necessary.

What You'll Need to Apply

For a bank or SBA working capital line, lenders are going to want at least 24 months of business history, a personal FICO of 640 or better, and annual revenue of $150,000–$250,000 at minimum — though most Ohio contractors working commercial accounts are well above that floor. Lenders will pull 12 months of business bank statements and want to see your debt service coverage at 1.25x or better, meaning every dollar of monthly loan payment should be covered by at least $1.25 in operating cash flow. Monthly debt obligations generally shouldn't exceed 45–50% of gross monthly revenue.

For an Ohio-specific application, pull together: your Ohio contractor license (required for any project over $1,000 in residential work; commercial thresholds vary by municipality), your Ohio Secretary of State business registration, a current contractor's liability insurance certificate, your most recent two years of business tax returns, a schedule of current contracts with projected completion dates and outstanding receivables, and — if you're bidding prevailing wage work — your certified payroll compliance documentation. If your personal credit sits in the 620–679 range, it's worth pulling your own report first; one in five credit reports contains a material error, and correcting one before the lender sees it can move your rate down a full tier.

Alternative lenders will ask for less paperwork and move faster, but price that convenience into your decision. For most Ohio GCs carrying steady commercial work, the SBA channel or a community bank relationship — even at 30–45 days to fund — is the better long-term play.

By state

Frequently asked questions

How quickly can an Ohio general contractor access working capital funds?

Online lenders and alternative financing sources can approve and fund working capital in 24–72 hours. SBA 7(a) loans, which offer lower rates in the 8.5–11% APR range, typically take 30–45 days from application to funding — longer but worth it for larger draws or longer repayment windows.

Does Ohio's prompt payment law reduce the need for working capital?

It helps at the margins but doesn't eliminate the gap. Ohio's Prompt Payment Act requires owners to pay GCs within 10 days of receiving funds, and GCs to pay subs within 10 days after that — but public projects often run on a 30-day invoice cycle before that clock even starts, meaning crews and suppliers still need to be paid weeks before cash arrives.

What credit score does an Ohio contractor need to qualify for working capital?

Most bank and SBA programs require a 640+ personal FICO. Scores in the fair-credit range of 620–679 will still qualify at many lenders but typically carry a rate premium of 2–4 percentage points above what a 700+ borrower would see. Alternative lenders go lower, but rates climb sharply and can reach 80–150% APR equivalent on merchant cash advance products — worth avoiding unless there's no other option.

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