Related Headlines
| 05/22/2024 | DoorDash questioned about MCAs |
| 08/02/2022 | MCA co behind DoorDash Capital raises $60M |
| 05/23/2022 | DoorDash Capital not mentioned in Q1 |
| 02/09/2022 | DoorDash finally announces its MCA program |
| 12/09/2020 | DoorDash sells at $102/share |
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DoorDash Expands its Cash Advance Program to the Dashers Themselves
July 21, 2022
First it was restaurants. Now it’s the Dashers. DoorDash recently launched a limited trial of a new program, cash advances to delivery people. It’s a bit altruistic, however, because it is technically an interest-free 30-day loan with no fees at all.
According to the website, loans are paid back either through a percentage of future Dasher earnings or by placing a debit card on file. Loan amounts are determined by a Dasher’s revenue history. Credit is not a factor.
“Dashers who receive an email or see details in app about this pilot are qualified to participate in this pilot,” the site says. Preliminary reviews online by Dashers that have purportedly tried it, claim loan amounts can go as low as $50.
Eligibility is discoverable through the app. “Check your Dasher app to apply for a cash advance,” the site says. “Select how much cash you want and choose your repayment method.” Payments begin 7 days after funding.
DoorDash launched its other program, its merchant cash advance program via DoorDash Capital, late last year.
DoorDash Capital Warrants No Mention in Latest Report
May 23, 2022Readers interested in hearing the results of DoorDash’s foray in to MCA funding were keenly disappointed by the last earnings call. It didn’t even come up. The product was formally announced by DoorDash on February 9th. At the time, the company said that it was offering DoorDash merchants MCAs through a partner company named Parafin. The offers would be visible right in the DoorDash portal.
DoorDash reported Q1 revenue of $1.5B and a net loss of $167M. The material impact of DoorDash Capital, only in its infancy, was likely minimal then.
DoorDash Now Offers Merchant Cash Advances
January 19, 2022
DoorDash has made its way into the small business financing game. DoorDash Capital, as the financing arm is so named, claims to provide merchant cash advances to DoorDash partners against future sales orders placed through the DoorDash app.
The DoorDash website explains the product in detail.
“There is no interest rate because a merchant cash advance is not a loan,” the website says. “There is a fixed fee stated up front which will be collected together with the capital advance. Your fee will never change after you have accepted the offer.”
All of these deals are processed through Parafin, a Silicon Valley-based funder who was started by former Robinhood data scientists and engineers. They spoke to the Wall Street Journal in September about their launch and the onboarding of their first customer, Mindbody.
As a software provider with a financing arm of their business, Mindbody reportedly uses Parafin’s funds to provide financing through Mindbody Capital. When speaking to the Journal, Parafin’s Chief Executive Sahill Poddar said that Mindbody customers would pay fees between 6%-15%.
“We are categorically distinct from online lenders,” Poddar told the Journal.“We only get paid back when the [small business] makes sales.”
It’s still unclear the amount of DoorDash merchants getting financing from DoorDash Capital. From the looks of it, the program is still in its infancy.
When AltFinanceDaily reached out to DoorDash for a progress report on the program, the company declined to speak. “No comment at this time,” said a DoorDash representative when asked about the progress, usage, and ideas behind DoorDash Capital.
“Our goal is to provide our partners with fair, fast and convenient financing,” the DoorDash website says. “To help partners gain access to additional capital, we partnered with Parafin, a business financing provider, to offer cash advances that you pay back automatically with your DoorDash sales. You can use the capital for inventory, payroll, rent, marketing or for your cash flow needs.”
BlueVine Partners with DoorDash to Fund $6 Million in PPP
July 29, 2020
This week BlueVine announced that since partnering with the food delivery service DoorDash in late April, over 180 businesses have received funds from the Paycheck Protection Program via said partnership. Totaling over $6 million, the partnership exclusively served restaurants on DoorDash’s platform, offering them a PPP pathway through BlueVine in email correspondence as well as the DoorDash merchant portal.
“DoorDash saw a need within their merchant partner base to be able to quickly apply for and receive a PPP loan – something many were not able to do through traditional banking services – and was looking to solve the accessibility factor with a partnership,” BlueVine CCO Brad Brodigan said in an email. “Small restaurants in particular were unable to access funds they needed to stay in business and navigate through this uncertain time, and the hope was that information from a trusted source like DoorDash would help them look for solutions if their bank was unable to help them.”
The $6 million funded is part of the larger $3.5 billion in PPP money that BlueVine claims to have funded to +100,000 businesses. According to Brodigan, the median loan size for the DoorDash deals was $16,000; with the median employees on payroll being five. DoorDash will be donating all referral fees from the program to the CRA Restaurants Care Covid-19 Grant as well as the Small Business Relief Fund.
Revenue Based Financing Continues to Spread at Global Pace
September 30, 2025
Earlier this month, Uber Eats joined the revenue-based financing movement by partnering with Pipe Capital.
Karl Hebert, Vice President of Global Commerce and Financial Services at Uber, said of it, “We are happy to team up with Pipe to bring working capital to Uber Eats. Restaurants are our partners at Uber, and the backbone of our communities, yet many struggle with access to capital.”
It’s an unsurprising step considering rival DoorDash rolled out a merchant cash advance program nearly four years ago, though Uber arguably began experimenting with MCAs nearly ten years ago. And Uber is hardly doing it just to do it. Uber, for example, rolled out Uber Eats Financing, a revenue based financing product in Mexico through a partnership with R2 this past January, which went so well that they also rolled it out in Chile months later.
📢 Announcing a big milestone for R2 & @Uber!
Following a successful launch in Mexico, we’ve expanded our partnership with Uber Eats to Chile — bringing frictionless access to capital to thousands of merchants across the region. https://t.co/61WgP1ZtHy
— Roger Larach (@rogerlarach) April 30, 2025
In Chile with R2, the service is described as taking place entirely within the Uber Eats Manager App with a 5-minute application process and payments made automatically and deducted by a fixed percentage from sales made using the platform.
In the US with Pipe, it says that the Uber Eats App Manager will show capital offers from Pipe that are customized based on restaurant revenue, cash flow, and business performance.
Uber joins Amazon, Walmart, Shopify, Intuit, Stripe, DoorDash, PayPal, Square, GoDaddy, Wix, Squarespace and others in offering a revenue-based financing product.
Revenue-based financing as a product type is available in but not limited to the US, Canada, Mexico, Chile, UK, Germany, Ireland, Spain, South Africa, Nigeria, India, Hong Kong, Netherlands, Australia, Japan, Brazil, Singapore, and more.
The Great Concession, How the MCA Product Effectively Proved It Was Right All Along
September 26, 2025
There was no greater irony than the State of Texas banning ACH debits from sales-based financing providers at the same time that the State of Washington was celebrating the coming age of sales-based financing. In Texas, for example, the motivation for curbing sales-based financing was built on the premise that “this type of financing has raised significant concerns about predatory lending and that state attorneys general as well as the Federal Trade Commission have obtained high-profile judgments against such financing for predatory practices.” Meanwhile, in Washington, the motivation for the state holding the opposite opinion was that sales-based financing “increases access to capital for small businesses in Washington state, particularly those that have been historically underserved or underbanked.”
How did these states reach the opposite conclusion?
There’s no caveat to how the Washington State program works. The State’s Department of Commerce partnered with Grow America and the operation is backed by a federal grant (SSBCI-21031-0048) to roll out and administer a revenue-based financing program as part of Washington’s State Small Business Credit Initiative. It’s sales-based financing or in this case revenue-based financing (which is the more common phrase these days). Grow America’s revenue-based financing program utters a very familiar phrase in its marketing.
“The months you generate more revenue, you pay a higher amount, when business is slower you pay less,” the company advertises.
This was at one time the signature calling card of a merchant cash advance, but now such features have been repackaged and rebranded into something similar but different, and everybody is doing them.
The Grow America program applies a 20% holdback on adjusted monthly revenue and requires a minimum monthly payment of $1,000 if the 20% holdback does not generate at least $1,000 for the month. Merchants can get approved for anywhere from $50,000 to $1 million. The product is marketed as having a 1.24 factor rate and an estimated 14.27% APR with a 3-year term. As industry participants are aware, increasing sales would translate into increasing payments, which means a rapidly paid off loan could potentially result in a final outcome APR in the triple digits, far and away from the “estimate.”
The irony is that the notable benefits of a similar product, merchant cash advances, which have no minimum monthly payments, no fixed term, and are not absolutely repayable, are eliminated when restructured in this way and presented as “revenue-based financing loans.” Revenue-based financing loans take the underlying structure of MCAs (payments tied to sales) and then strip away the benefits. However, when structured as loans, the argument often goes that they are likely to be cheaper, which may be true on average, but is not always true.
Indeed, Grow America leads specifically with price as for why its product, similar to its privately owned competitors, are the better option:
“There are a lot of online lenders offering revenue-based loans that promise instant approvals, but their terms are intentionally confusing, and the fees are high,” Grow America advertises. “Our lenders aren’t like that. They’re mission driven.”
In Texas, the author of the bill that banned debits from such financing providers “informed the [legislative] committee that commercial sales-based financing has become a popular financing option for small businesses desperate for credit and that, unlike traditional loans, this type of financing is repaid as a percentage of future sales or revenue.”
Indeed, it is very popular. The largest providers or brokers of such financing today whether structured as a purchase or loan, are household names like Amazon, Walmart, Shopify, Intuit, Stripe, DoorDash, PayPal, Square, GoDaddy, Wix, Squarespace and more. Some structure them as a purchase and call it a merchant cash advance and some structure it as a loan and call it revenue-based financing. In either case, payments are tied to the percentage of future sales or revenue.
In egregious cases of wrongdoing one way or another, such incidents have historically been a result of deceptive marketing or payments from a merchant exceeding the contracted amount. In New York, when transactions are structured as a purchase, courts generally look to make sure that the agreements have a reconciliation provision in the agreement, whether the agreement has a finite term, and whether there is any recourse should the merchant declare bankruptcy. Legally speaking, the products have become pretty well defined and understood in the court system.
Like Washington State, GoDaddy, which recently announced its new merchant cash advance program, markets its product in an almost identical fashion.
“If your sales go up, the MCA will be paid sooner; if the sales are slow, it’ll take longer,” GoDaddy says.
Same message.
Washington State requires merchants to make a minimum payment every month and a balloon payment if not fully repaid within 3 years. GoDaddy, by contrast, advertises no minimum payment amount, no set payment schedule, no penalties, and no late fees. One’s a loan, one’s a purchase.
While the best course of action is best left to the merchants, there appears to be a near-universal concession that the underlying nature of how merchant cash advance agreements were contemplated, payments tied to sales, made strong logical business sense all along. Washington State emphasizes this fact.
“We know that your business has its own needs and loans with fixed payment amounts may not be the best option for you,” they advertise. “The revenue-based financing fund offers loans with flexible payback terms so you can grow your business immediately and pay back your loan based on your varying revenue.”
Recent studies also now highlight the benefits of cash-flow-based underwriting.
In Sharpening the Focus: Using Cash-Flow Data to Underwrite Financially Constrained Businesses, “The paper finds that adding cash-flow information substantially increases the predictive signal of models that rely primarily on the business owners’ personal credit scores and firm characteristics.”
There’s also Square, the largest revenue-based financing provider in the US, that has explained why this system just works better. Square says that they can fund more businesses and have higher payment success rates than if they were to follow more conventional methods of underwriting and repayment.
“Square Loans addresses [the credit] gap by using near real-time business data to assess creditworthiness, evaluating metrics such as transaction volume and revenue patterns to offer short-term loans — with repayment on average in 8 months,” Square wrote in a White Paper. “This allows for a more accurate and timely understanding of a business’s capacity to borrow and repay. And loan repayments are higher during periods when business is stronger and reduced when sales are lower.”



What’s the sentiment these days on payments tied to sales revenue? The market has spoken.

From the CERN Large Hadron Collider to Funding Working Capital Loans to SMBs
August 20, 2025When AltFinanceDaily stumbled upon a scoop that DoorDash had begun offering merchant cash advances in late 2021, the tech and financing team behind it had not been on anyone’s radar. That company was Parafin which at the time appeared to be a startup comprised of former Robinhood engineers. But the backstory is a bit more wild because its CEO and Co-founder Sahill Poddar previously worked on getting his PhD by discovering the Higgs boson particle at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider. His credentials include a Doctorate (summa cum laude) in Particle Physics at European Council for Nuclear Research (CERN), Geneva, Switzerland and before that he was a Visiting Researcher for the Max-Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in Germany. But today, at Parafin, his company makes $10 billion in funding offers to small businesses EACH DAY. The company has now funded more than 30,000 businesses since inception.
Turner Novak at The Peel secured Poddar as a guest on how Parafin came to be and it’s a must watch.
The Largest Sales-Based Financing Providers
May 27, 2025Who are some of the largest sales-based financing providers in the US? The following companies are repaid as a percentage of sales or revenue, in which the payment amount may increase or decrease according to the volume of sales made or revenue received by the recipient:
| Sales-Based Financing Providers |
| Square |
| PayPal |
| Amazon (via Parafin) |
| Walmart (via Parafin) |
| Shopify |
| Intuit |
| Stripe |
| DoorDash (via Parafin) |
The State of Washington has also recently announced it will be offering sales-based financing through a Department of Commerce initiative.
Among those listed above, Square recently published a White Paper on the impact of its sales-based financing.
“Square Loans has opened credit to populations who traditionally have had less access to business loans. As of the third quarter of 2024, approximately 58% of Square Loan customers are women-owned businesses, compared to the industry average of 19%.38 And 15% of Square Loans go to Black/African-owned businesses compared to an industry average of 6.6%, while 14% of loans go to Hispanic/Latinx-owned businesses compared to the industry average of 11.3%.”





























