Factoring

Enhance your cash flow management with our diverse Factoring Solutions. Tailored to accelerate your receivables turnover, our services ensure you have the liquidity to operate and grow based on money your business has already earned.

Basics

Understanding Factoring

Factoring is a financial service where businesses sell their invoices or purchase orders to a third-party entity (a factor) to receive immediate cash. This solution is ideal for managing and improving cash flow, allowing businesses to maintain steady operations and growth without waiting for payment terms to conclude.

Loan Varieties

Invoice Factoring

This method involves selling your outstanding invoices to a factor for immediate cash, reducing the wait for customer payments, and improving your cash flow cycle.

Purchase Order Factoring

Secure advance funding based on confirmed purchase orders, allowing you to fulfill large orders without impacting your cash reserves.

Contract Factoring

Convert your long-term contract receivables into immediate cash, ensuring consistent cash flow throughout the duration of a contract.

Non-Recourse vs Recourse Factoring

Choose Non-Recourse Factoring to avoid the risk of uncollectible accounts, as the factor assumes the credit risk. Opt for Recourse Factoring for lower fees, with the business retaining the credit risk of the receivables.

Benefits

Factoring can help businesses access cash tied up in unpaid invoices, making it easier to manage payroll, vendor payments, inventory, and daily operating expenses while waiting for customers to pay.

Improves cash flow timing

Convert outstanding invoices into working capital instead of waiting 30, 60, or 90 days for customer payments.

Supports ongoing operations

Use invoice-based funding to cover payroll, supplier costs, inventory, and other business expenses tied to active work.

May be easier than traditional loans

Factoring is often based on customer invoices and payment quality, which may help businesses that do not qualify for standard bank financing.

Can grow with sales volume

As your business generates more eligible invoices, factoring availability may increase to support larger orders, more customers, and higher revenue.

Challenges

Factoring can be useful, but it should be reviewed carefully. The right structure depends on customer payment history, invoice quality, fees, contract terms, and how the funding will support your business.

Factoring costs can be higher than traditional financing

Customer payment behavior can affect availability

Some contracts may include minimum volume requirements

Not all invoices may qualify for funding

Practical Invoice Funding for Business Owners

Invoice Factoring: Turn unpaid customer invoices into working capital so your business can access cash faster and keep operations moving.

Accounts Receivable Financing: Use eligible receivables to support short-term cash flow needs while maintaining a clearer plan for customer collections.

Growth and Order Support: Use factoring to help cover operating costs when sales are growing, customers are slow to pay, or larger orders require more upfront cash.

Apply Now to Review Better Options for Your Unpaid Invoices

F.A.Q’s

Common Questions Answered

What is invoice factoring?
Invoice factoring is a funding option where a business sells eligible unpaid invoices to a factoring company in exchange for faster access to cash.
What types of businesses use factoring?
Factoring is often used by businesses that invoice other businesses, including staffing companies, trucking companies, manufacturers, wholesalers, contractors, and service providers.
Do all invoices qualify for factoring?
No. Lenders or factoring companies usually review the customer, invoice amount, payment terms, age of the invoice, and whether the invoice is valid and collectible.