Revenue-based financing (RBF) is a form of business funding where a finance provider advances a lump sum of capital in exchange for a fixed percentage of the business’s future revenue until an agreed total amount has been repaid. Unlike a traditional business loan , repayments rise and fall in line with your income — when revenue is high, you repay more; when revenue dips, you repay less.

This makes RBF particularly attractive for businesses with recurring or predictable revenue streams, such as SaaS companies, subscription-based businesses, and e-commerce brands.

How Revenue-Based Financing Works

The Basic Mechanics

  1. The provider assesses your business based on revenue history and projections
  2. You receive a lump sum — typically 1 to 6 months’ worth of monthly revenue
  3. You repay by giving the provider a fixed percentage of your monthly (or daily) revenue
  4. Repayments continue until you have repaid the advance plus a fixed fee (the repayment cap)
  5. Once the cap is reached, the arrangement ends — there is no ongoing obligation

Key Terms

TermMeaning
Advance amountThe lump sum you receive upfront
Revenue share percentageThe fixed % of revenue paid to the provider each period (typically 5-25%)
Repayment capThe total amount to be repaid (advance + fee), usually 1.1x to 2x the advance
Factor rateThe multiplier applied to the advance to calculate the repayment cap

Example

A business receives an advance of £100,000 with a factor rate of 1.3x and a revenue share of 10%:

MonthMonthly revenueRepayment (10%)Remaining balance
1£50,000£5,000£125,000
2£60,000£6,000£119,000
3£45,000£4,500£114,500
4£70,000£7,000£107,500

The total repayment is £130,000 (£100,000 x 1.3). The time it takes to repay depends entirely on how quickly revenue comes in.

Costs and Pricing

RBF is not priced as an interest rate because the repayment period is variable. Instead, providers use a factor rate or flat fee:

Factor rateFee on £100,000 advanceTotal repayment
1.1x£10,000£110,000
1.3x£30,000£130,000
1.5x£50,000£150,000
2.0x£100,000£200,000

To compare RBF costs with a traditional loan, you can calculate the effective APR based on assumed repayment timelines. For example, a 1.3x factor rate repaid over 12 months is roughly equivalent to a 50-55% APR. Repaid over 18 months, the effective APR drops to around 35-40%.

This makes RBF significantly more expensive than a bank loan but potentially cheaper than giving up equity in your business.

Who Qualifies

RBF providers typically look for:

CriterionTypical requirement
Monthly revenueMinimum £10,000 - £50,000 per month
Trading historyAt least 6-12 months of revenue data
Revenue consistencyPredictable, recurring revenue preferred
Payment processor dataAccess to Stripe, GoCardless, or bank transaction data for verification
ProfitabilityNot always required — revenue trajectory is more important

Because RBF is secured against future revenue rather than assets, it is accessible to businesses without significant physical assets or property. There is usually no personal guarantee required, and the provider does not take equity or a board seat.

RBF vs Other Financing Options

FeatureRevenue-Based FinancingBank LoanEquity Investment
Repayment% of revenue (variable)Fixed monthly instalmentsNo repayment (ownership diluted)
CostFactor rate 1.1x-2.0xInterest rate 3-12%Equity dilution (potentially 10-40%)
SecurityRevenue assignmentAssets or personal guaranteeNone (equity stake)
SpeedDays to weeksWeeks to monthsMonths
ControlNo equity dilution, no board seatNo equity dilutionInvestor influence, board seat
FlexibilityPayments adjust to revenueFixed payments regardless of revenueNo payments

Compared to debt financing , RBF offers flexibility. Compared to equity, it preserves ownership. The trade-off is cost — RBF is more expensive than most debt but avoids permanent dilution.

When RBF Makes Sense

RBF is well-suited to:

  • SaaS and subscription businesses with monthly recurring revenue (MRR)
  • E-commerce businesses with consistent online sales and card payment data
  • Businesses scaling quickly that need capital for marketing, inventory, or hiring and can demonstrate a clear return on investment
  • Companies that want to avoid equity dilution but cannot access affordable bank lending
  • Seasonal businesses that benefit from repayments adjusting to revenue fluctuations

When RBF Does Not Make Sense

  • Pre-revenue startups — You need an existing revenue stream to qualify
  • Low-margin businesses — The revenue share percentage can consume too much of a thin margin
  • Businesses with volatile or declining revenue — The repayment period extends, increasing the effective cost
  • Capital expenditure with long payback periods — If the investment will not generate revenue for months or years, the revenue share puts pressure on cash flow before the returns materialise

UK RBF Providers

The UK market for revenue-based financing has grown significantly. Major providers include:

ProviderTypical advanceRevenue shareNotes
Uncapped£10k - £10m5-25%SaaS and e-commerce focus
Outfund£10k - £10mVariableE-commerce and subscription
CapchaseCustomCustomSaaS-focused, US and UK
Clearco£10k - £10mVariableE-commerce, data-driven

Providers differ in their underwriting approach, speed of funding, and the data sources they require (e.g. Stripe, Shopify, Xero, bank feeds). Shopping around is essential.

Accounting Treatment

Revenue-based financing is typically classified as a financial liability on the balance sheet. The advance is recorded as a liability, and repayments reduce it:

When the advance is received:

Debit:  Bank
Credit: RBF liability

Each repayment period:

Debit:  RBF liability (principal portion)
Debit:  Finance costs (fee portion)
Credit: Bank

The fee (the difference between the advance and the repayment cap) is spread over the expected repayment period as a finance cost in the profit and loss account. The exact accounting treatment depends on the terms of the agreement and whether the arrangement is classified as a loan or a factoring arrangement.

Tax Treatment

  • The fee element of RBF repayments is deductible as a business expense for Corporation Tax or income tax purposes, similar to interest on a loan
  • The advance itself is not taxable income — it is a liability
  • VAT is not typically charged on RBF fees (financial services exemption)

Discuss the classification with your accountant, as the treatment may vary depending on the specific contract terms and how the arrangement is structured.