Factoring vs a small-business loan: why factoring often wins
A small-business loan and invoice factoring can both put cash in the bank, but for the everyday challenge of funding growth they behave very differently — and factoring often comes out ahead.
No fixed repayments dragging on cash flow
A loan adds a fixed monthly repayment whether or not it's a good month. Factoring has no repayment schedule: the advances are settled by your customers' payments. That keeps your monthly outgoings lighter and more predictable.
Funding that keeps pace with growth
Loans are for a fixed amount. The day you take one out, it may already be too small for where you're heading. A factoring facility expands as you invoice more — so funding tracks your growth instead of capping it.
Easier to secure
Loans often hinge on property security or a strong balance sheet. Factoring is underwritten largely on the quality of your invoices and customers, so a fast-growing business with limited assets can still qualify.
When a loan still wins
Factoring isn't always the answer. For a one-off capital purchase — a machine, a vehicle, a fit-out — with a clear payback, a term loan can be cleaner and cheaper. The trick is matching the tool to the need: loans for one-off assets, factoring for recurring working capital.
See what your invoices could release
Tell us how your business invoices and a director will give you a straight, no-obligation view on fit — usually within a day or two.
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