- "No-doc" means light documentation, not zero — you skip tax returns, financial statements, and business plans, not the basics.
- The core document is 3–6 months of business bank statements, plus a short application, a government ID, and usually a voided check.
- Merchant cash advances and short-term working capital are the most paperwork-light products, and invoice factoring is also light since it centers on your customers' invoices.
- Less documentation means more priced-in risk, so low-doc funding carries higher rates and shorter terms than fuller-doc options.
Funding without the paperwork mountain
Traditional bank loans ask for years of tax returns, financial statements, and a formal business plan — a process that can take weeks and stalls plenty of healthy businesses. Low-doc and no-doc products cut that down to the essentials. In practice, the deciding document is your recent bank statements, which show a funder everything they need about your revenue and cash flow.
The lightest-documentation products
- Merchant cash advance — usually just a one-page application and a few months of bank statements. The most paperwork-light option available.
- Short-term working capital — underwritten primarily on recent bank statements, with no tax returns or financials required.
- Invoice factoring — approval hinges on your outstanding invoices and your customers’ credit, so your own financial package barely matters.
What “low-doc” still requires
Expect to provide a short application, your last 3-6 months of business bank statements, a government ID, and a voided check or bank verification. That’s typically the whole package — a fraction of what a bank or SBA loan demands.
An honest note on cost
The convenience of low documentation isn’t free. With less information to underwrite, funders offset their risk with higher rates and shorter repayment terms. If your business can comfortably produce fuller documentation, you’ll often unlock cheaper funding — and Hoss Capital will flag when handing over a few more documents is worth the savings.