---
title: "Shopify Capital Guide 2026: Funding for Merchants Explained"
description: "Complete Shopify Capital guide. Learn how merchant cash advances and business loans work, eligibility, repayment terms, rates, and whether Capital is right for your store."
url: https://easyappsecom.com/guides/shopify-shopify-capital-guide.html
date: 2026-03-20
---

# Shopify Capital Guide 2026: Funding for Merchants Explained

EasyApps Ecommerce

Last updated: March 2026

Shopify Capital Guide 2026: Funding for Merchants Explained

By Jack Smith · Updated March 19, 2026 · 22 min read

TL;DR: Shopify Capital provides business funding to eligible merchants through merchant cash advances and business loans, with amounts from $200 to $2 million. Repayment is automatic through a percentage of daily sales, so you pay more when business is good and less when it is slow. There is no application process — Shopify offers Capital to merchants based on store performance data. The typical total cost of capital ranges from 10-17% of the funded amount.

Growth requires capital. Whether you need to purchase inventory for a seasonal rush, fund a marketing campaign, hire staff, or invest in new product development, most ecommerce businesses reach a point where they need more cash than their current revenue provides. Traditional business loans are slow (4-6 weeks for approval), require extensive documentation, and often reject ecommerce businesses due to limited operating history or unconventional business models.

Shopify Capital exists to solve this problem. It provides fast, flexible funding to Shopify merchants based on their store performance data — not credit scores, business plans, or collateral. The money can be in your account within days, and repayment happens automatically through a percentage of your daily sales. This guide covers everything you need to know about Shopify Capital: how it works, what it costs, whether you qualify, and how to use it effectively.

What Is Shopify Capital?

Shopify Capital is a funding program that provides business financing to eligible Shopify merchants. It offers two types of funding: merchant cash advances (MCAs) and business loans. Both are designed for speed and simplicity — there is no traditional application process, no credit check, and no collateral required.

Instead of applying for Capital, Shopify offers it to you. Using your store's sales data, traffic patterns, growth trajectory, and other performance metrics, Shopify's algorithms determine whether your business qualifies for funding and how much you can receive. If you are eligible, you will see a Capital offer in your Shopify admin with the available amount and terms. You can accept the full amount, a partial amount, or decline.

Funding amounts range from $200 to $2 million, depending on your store's performance. The typical offer for a small to medium store is $5,000 to $50,000. High-volume stores can receive offers of $100,000 or more. The funds are deposited into your bank account (or Shopify Balance) within 2-5 business days of accepting the offer.

Types of Funding: MCA vs. Business Loan

Shopify Capital offers two distinct products: merchant cash advances and business loans. The key difference is in how repayment works.

Merchant Cash Advance (MCA): With an MCA, Shopify purchases a portion of your future sales at a discount. You receive a lump sum upfront and repay through a fixed percentage of your daily sales (typically 10-17%). There is no fixed repayment schedule — you pay more on high-sales days and less on slow days. The total amount you repay (the “purchased amount”) is fixed upfront and is typically 10-17% more than what you received. MCAs have no fixed end date; repayment continues until the full purchased amount is paid back.

Business Loan: A Shopify business loan is a more traditional structure with a fixed repayment term (typically 12 months). You receive a lump sum and make fixed daily or weekly payments. The interest rate is disclosed upfront as an APR. Business loans are available in some regions and may offer different terms than MCAs.

Most Shopify merchants receive MCA offers rather than loan offers. The MCA structure is advantageous during slow periods because repayment automatically adjusts to your sales volume. If you have a week with low sales, your repayment is proportionally lower. This flexibility reduces the risk of cash flow problems caused by fixed payment obligations.

Eligibility and How Offers Work

You cannot apply for Shopify Capital — you must be invited through an offer in your Shopify admin. Shopify evaluates all merchants continuously and extends offers to those who meet certain performance thresholds. While Shopify does not publish exact criteria, the following factors are known to influence eligibility.

Consistent sales history is the most important factor. Merchants with at least 3-6 months of steady or growing sales are more likely to receive offers. Shopify Payments usage is typically required, as it gives Shopify visibility into your transaction data. Store age matters — very new stores rarely receive offers. Order volume and frequency, average order value, and refund rates all factor into the algorithm. Geographic eligibility varies; Capital is available in the US, UK, Canada, and Australia as of 2026.

If you receive an offer, it will appear in the Capital section of your Shopify admin (under Finances). The offer includes the funding amount available, the total amount you will repay, the remittance rate (percentage of daily sales used for repayment), and an estimated repayment timeline. You can use the slider to adjust the funding amount — taking less than the full offer will proportionally reduce the total repayment amount and rate.

Key Stat: Shopify Capital has funded over $5 billion to merchants since its launch. The average merchant who accepts Capital sees a 36% increase in sales over the following 6 months, likely because the funding enables inventory purchases and marketing investments that drive growth.

Cost of Capital and Repayment Terms

Understanding the true cost of Shopify Capital is essential for making a smart funding decision. The cost is expressed as a factor rate (for MCAs) or APR (for loans). For MCAs, a typical factor rate is 1.10 to 1.17, meaning you repay $1.10 to $1.17 for every $1.00 received. A $10,000 advance with a 1.15 factor rate means you repay $11,500 total — $10,000 in principal plus $1,500 in fees.

The remittance rate is the percentage of daily sales automatically deducted for repayment, typically ranging from 10% to 17%. If your store does $1,000 in sales on a given day and your remittance rate is 10%, $100 goes toward Capital repayment and $900 goes to you. On a $500 day, only $50 goes toward repayment. This variable structure protects you during slow periods.

Funded Amount Factor Rate Total Repayment Cost of Capital Remittance Rate

$5,000 1.10 $5,500 $500 (10%) 10%

$10,000 1.13 $11,300 $1,300 (13%) 11%

$25,000 1.15 $28,750 $3,750 (15%) 13%

$50,000 1.17 $58,500 $8,500 (17%) 15%

The effective APR of Shopify Capital depends on how quickly you repay (which depends on your sales volume). If you repay a 1.15 factor rate advance in 6 months, the effective APR is roughly 30%. If you repay in 12 months, the effective APR drops to roughly 15%. This is more expensive than a traditional SBA loan (6-10% APR) but much cheaper than credit cards (20-25% APR) and significantly faster and easier to obtain.

Best Uses for Shopify Capital

The best use of Capital is for investments that generate a clear, measurable return. Here are the highest-ROI uses for Shopify Capital funding.

Inventory purchases. Buying inventory in bulk typically provides 20-40% cost savings compared to small-order purchasing. If a $10,000 Capital advance lets you buy inventory at a 30% bulk discount, you save $3,000 on inventory that would have cost $10,000 in small orders — more than covering the $1,500 cost of capital.

Marketing and advertising. If you have a proven advertising channel with a positive ROAS (return on ad spend), Capital lets you scale that spending. A store with a 3x ROAS on Facebook ads that invests $10,000 in Capital generates $30,000 in revenue — easily covering the $11,500 repayment and pocketing a substantial profit.

Seasonal preparation. Use Capital to stock up before peak seasons (Black Friday, Christma...
