Supports supplier, stock or import/export timing before the final customer has paid.
Funding comparison · decision guideOption 1Trade finance Option 2Invoice finance Decision shortcutUse this rule
Trade finance vs invoice finance.
Trade finance and invoice finance sit at different points in the transaction. One helps fund the purchase or supply of goods before sale; the other releases cash after invoices have been raised.
Releases cash from completed sales once an eligible invoice has been raised.
If the pressure is before sale, assess trade finance. If the pressure is after sale, assess invoice finance.
Decision guide
The practical difference.
This is a commercial starting point, not a rule. The right answer depends on evidence, urgency, security and repayment route.
Trade finance sits before or during the buying cycle.
Supplier invoices, customer orders and margin evidence matter.
Invoices without delivery evidence or debtor strength are weak.
| Question | Usually stronger when | Watch-out |
|---|---|---|
| Timing | Trade finance sits before or during the buying cycle. | Invoice finance sits after delivery and invoicing. |
| Evidence | Supplier invoices, customer orders and margin evidence matter. | Debtor quality, invoice validity and delivery evidence matter. |
| Repayment | Often repaid when goods are sold and customer invoices settle. | Repaid from customer collections on funded invoices. |
| Watch-out | Speculative stock without demand is weak. | Invoices without delivery evidence or debtor strength are weak. |

