HVAC Contractor Working Capital in California
California HVAC contractors use working capital to bridge permits, cover payroll, and stock refrigerants before commercial and residential jobs pay out.
Who's Actually Using Working Capital in California HVAC
The contractors coming to us for working capital in California are not the one-truck owner-operator running warranty calls in Fresno. They're the 5-to-25-person shops doing commercial tenant improvement work in the Bay Area, multi-family retrofits in Los Angeles, and school district HVAC upgrades throughout the Central Valley. The typical deal size we see is somewhere between $80,000 and $400,000 in project contract value — big enough that the gap between mobilization and first draw creates a real cash problem, not big enough that the GC or public agency is willing to front materials.
These contractors are usually C-20 licensed, have been operating for at least three years, and carry $400,000 to $1.5 million in annual revenue. The buyer profile is an operator who has the work — often a signed contract or a purchase order in hand — but is running short on the liquidity to staff up, stock refrigerant, and pay subcontractors before the first progress payment hits. Working capital closes that gap without requiring the contractor to pledge specific equipment or wait on an SBA timeline.
What California Adds to the Equation
California's climate makes HVAC demand less seasonal than most states, but it creates its own cash flow peculiarities. The coastal counties — Los Angeles, San Diego, the Bay Area — run year-round cooling loads, so there is no true off-season to bank cash. The inland valleys like Sacramento, Stockton, and the Coachella Valley swing between extreme heat seasons and mild winters, which compresses revenue into hard peaks that require rapid crew scaling and material pre-purchasing.
On the regulatory side, California moves faster than federal timelines on refrigerants and efficiency standards. The California Air Resources Board has been enforcing restrictions on high-GWP refrigerants, and contractors are mid-transition on phasing out R-410A equipment in favor of A2L alternatives. That transition is not free — it requires new recovery equipment, updated technician training, and in many cases restocking inventory at higher unit cost. Permitting in California jurisdictions, particularly in Los Angeles County and the Bay Area cities, runs slow. A commercial replacement permit that might take two weeks in Texas can run six to eight weeks in LA, meaning you carry labor and material costs longer before the job is legally active.
Title 24 energy compliance — California's building energy code — adds scope to virtually every commercial replacement job. Contractors routinely find that a like-for-like swap on a rooftop unit cannot be permitted without duct sealing, controls upgrades, or demand-controlled ventilation, all of which expand the contract but also delay the start of work.
How Working Capital Actually Works for California HVAC Shops
For most California HVAC contractors, working capital comes in two structures: a revolving line of credit or a short-term term loan. A revolving line — typically $50,000 to $300,000 — works best for shops with multiple concurrent projects, because you draw what you need, pay it down when a payment lands, and draw again. A term loan with a fixed 12-to-24-month repayment schedule fits better when you have one large project with a defined mobilization cost and a predictable draw schedule.
Rates on working capital products in 2026 range from roughly 8.5% to 11% APR for well-qualified borrowers through SBA-aligned programs, and alternative lenders may price higher depending on your credit profile and time in business. Origination fees typically run 1–3% of the advance, so factor that into your true cost before comparing offers. If someone is quoting you a merchant cash advance, understand that the effective APR on those products often runs 80–150% — not a working capital tool, a last resort.
In practice, California HVAC contractors use working capital to cover payroll through a permit delay, front refrigerant and equipment orders before a GC issues a purchase order, bridge a public agency's net-60 payment terms, or fund the A2L transition inventory without tapping credit lines earmarked for equipment.
What California Lenders Are Going to Ask For
Time in business matters. Most conventional lenders want 24 months of operating history, and SBA programs require the same. Alternative lenders will sometimes move at 12 months if revenue is strong. Minimum annual revenue for unsecured working capital lines typically starts at $150,000–$250,000, and most lenders want to see a DSCR of at least 1.25x — meaning your net operating income covers debt service by 25% — before approving a line.
For a California applicant, pull together 12 months of business bank statements, your most recent two years of business tax returns (the Schedule C or Form 1120/1120S), a current accounts receivable aging report, and your C-20 license documentation. If you're applying for SBA-backed working capital, you'll also need a personal financial statement and personal tax returns. Credit-wise, the practical floor for conventional products is 640 FICO; scoring in the 620–679 range typically adds 2–4 percentage points to your rate compared to borrowers above 700. Pull your credit report before you apply — about 1 in 5 reports contain errors, and a dispute on a stale collection account can move your score enough to change your pricing tier.
By state
Frequently asked questions
How much working capital can a California HVAC contractor qualify for?
Most mid-sized California HVAC shops — running $500K to $3M in annual revenue — qualify for lines or term loans between $50,000 and $500,000. Shops clearing $1M+ with strong bank history can access more, particularly through SBA-backed products up to $5,000,000. The number that actually gets approved tracks closely to your average monthly revenue and whether your DSCR clears the 1.25x floor most lenders require.
Does California's refrigerant transition affect what I can use working capital for?
Yes, and it's a real cost driver right now. California is enforcing the phasedown of R-410A ahead of federal timelines, which means many contractors are buying A2L-compatible equipment and reworking tool inventories. Working capital is one of the cleanest ways to fund that transition without draining cash reserves, since the spending is operational rather than a hard asset purchase that would require equipment financing.
What credit score do I need to get working capital as a California HVAC contractor?
Most alternative lenders want to see a personal FICO of at least 600–620. For conventional bank lines or SBA-backed working capital, 640+ is the practical floor, and scoring above 700 gets you meaningfully better rates — typically 2 to 4 percentage points lower than borrowers in the 620–679 range. Pull your credit report before you apply; roughly 1 in 5 reports contain errors that can drag your score without your knowledge.
What business owners say
4.9-
This company was lightning fast and the experience was amazing. Thank you, Dan — you're a real pro!
-
Good service Joseph Krajewski is the best agent ever. He provided excellent service. I strongly recommend working with him if you have the opportunity.
-
They gave me a chance when nobody else would. I'm very satisfied.
- Working Capital for Arizona Concrete Contractors (19/06/2026)
- Working Capital for North Carolina Concrete Contractors (19/06/2026)
- Concrete Contractor Working Capital in Ohio (19/06/2026)
- Working Capital for Georgia Concrete Contractors (19/06/2026)
- Concrete Contractor Working Capital in Pennsylvania (19/06/2026)
- Working Capital for California Concrete Contractors (19/06/2026)
- Florida Concrete Contractor Working Capital (19/06/2026)
- General Contractor Working Capital in Ohio (19/06/2026)