When a business sells on credit, cash is locked in unpaid invoices until customers pay — typically 30 to 90 days later. Both invoice factoring and invoice discounting solve this problem by advancing cash against outstanding invoices before they are due. The critical difference is who collects the debt.

For a detailed look at how factoring works on its own, see the guide to invoice factoring .

How Invoice Factoring Works

With invoice factoring, you sell your unpaid invoices to a factoring company (the factor). The factor advances a percentage of the invoice value immediately and takes over the responsibility for collecting payment from your customers.

The Factoring Process

  1. You deliver goods or services and issue an invoice to your customer
  2. You send a copy of the invoice to the factoring company
  3. The factor advances 70% to 90% of the invoice value, usually within 24 hours
  4. The factor chases and collects payment from your customer
  5. Once the customer pays, the factor releases the remaining balance minus their fee

Your customer knows that a factoring company is involved because the factor contacts them directly to collect payment.

How Invoice Discounting Works

With invoice discounting, you also receive an advance against your unpaid invoices, but you retain control of your sales ledger and continue collecting payments yourself. The arrangement is typically confidential — your customers do not know that a finance provider is involved.

The Discounting Process

  1. You deliver goods or services and issue an invoice to your customer
  2. You notify the discounting provider and receive an advance of 70% to 90% of the invoice value
  3. You continue to chase and collect payment from your customer as normal
  4. When the customer pays into a designated trust account, the discounting provider takes back their advance plus fees
  5. The remaining balance is released to you

Key Differences

FeatureInvoice FactoringInvoice Discounting
Who collects paymentThe factorYour business
Customer awarenessCustomers know (disclosed)Usually confidential
Sales ledger managementHandled by the factorHandled by your business
Credit controlFactor manages chasing and collectionsYou manage chasing and collections
Bad debt protectionAvailable (non-recourse factoring)Rarely included
Typical advance rate70-90%75-90%
Typical cost1-5% of invoice value + service charge0.5-3% of invoice value
Minimum turnoverOften from £50,000Usually £100,000+
Contract length12-24 months typical12-24 months typical
Best forSmaller businesses, those needing credit control helpEstablished businesses with strong internal processes

Costs in Detail

Both services charge fees in two parts:

Factoring Fees

Fee componentTypical rangeCovers
Service charge (administration fee)0.5% - 3% of turnoverSales ledger management, credit control, collections
Discount charge (finance charge)1.5% - 4.5% over base rateInterest on the money advanced

Invoice Discounting Fees

Fee componentTypical rangeCovers
Service charge0.2% - 0.5% of turnoverAdministration and monitoring
Discount charge1.5% - 3.5% over base rateInterest on the money advanced

Invoice discounting is generally cheaper because the provider does less work — they are not managing your sales ledger or chasing your customers.

Recourse vs Non-Recourse

Recourse

With a recourse arrangement, if your customer does not pay, the debt comes back to you. You must repay the advance to the factor or discounter. This is the standard arrangement for most UK providers.

Non-Recourse

With non-recourse factoring, the factor absorbs the loss if a customer fails to pay due to insolvency. This is effectively a form of credit insurance built into the service. Non-recourse is more expensive but protects you against bad debt .

Non-recourse arrangements typically only cover insolvency — if a customer simply refuses to pay due to a dispute, the debt usually reverts to you.

Which Should You Choose?

Choose Factoring If

  • You are a smaller business without a dedicated credit control team
  • Your customers already expect to deal with third parties for payment
  • You want the factor to handle the entire collections process
  • You want access to bad debt protection (non-recourse option)
  • You are comfortable with customers knowing about the arrangement
  • Your accounts receivable management is taking up too much time

Choose Invoice Discounting If

  • You are an established business with a proven track record of collecting debts
  • Confidentiality matters — you do not want customers to know about the financing
  • You have strong internal credit control processes
  • Your annual turnover exceeds £100,000 (many providers require this as a minimum)
  • You want the lower cost of retaining control over collections
  • Customer relationships are important and you want to manage them directly

Selective vs Whole Turnover

Both factoring and discounting are available on a whole turnover basis (all invoices are included) or a selective basis (you choose which invoices to finance).

ApproachAdvantageDisadvantage
Whole turnoverSimpler administration, usually lower percentage feeMust include all invoices, even reliable payers
SelectiveOnly finance when needed, more flexibilityHigher per-invoice cost, more complex administration

Selective invoice finance (sometimes called spot factoring) is useful for businesses with seasonal cash flow or those that only need to accelerate payment on specific large invoices.

Accounting Treatment

Recording the Advance

When the factor or discounter advances funds against an invoice:

Debit:  Bank
Credit: Factoring / discounting liability

When the Customer Pays

For factoring (factor collects):

Debit:  Factoring liability
Credit: Trade receivables

For discounting (you collect into a trust account):

Debit:  Factoring liability
Credit: Trade receivables

Recording Fees

Debit:  Finance costs (P&L)
Credit: Bank / Factoring liability

The outstanding advance appears as a current liability on the balance sheet until the customer pays and the arrangement settles.

Impact on Customer Relationships

One of the most significant practical considerations is how each option affects your relationship with customers.

With factoring, your customers deal with the factor for payment queries, reminders, and debt recovery . This can feel impersonal, and some customers may interpret the involvement of a factoring company as a sign that your business has cash flow problems.

With invoice discounting, your customers see no change. You continue to send invoices, reminders, and statements as before. This preserves the relationship and your professional image.

Alternatives to Consider

If neither factoring nor discounting is right for your business, other options include:

  • Overdraft facility — Flexible borrowing against your bank account
  • Business loan — A fixed amount borrowed for a specific period
  • Asset finance — Borrowing secured against equipment or vehicles
  • Revenue-based financing — Repayments linked to your turnover