Cost guide · invoice finance

Invoice finance costs explained.

This is a cost guide, not a rate card. It explains the moving parts behind invoice finance pricing: service fee, discount charge, debtor quality, ledger behaviour, concentration risk and evidence quality, so you know what a quote is actually charging for.

Cost componentWhat you may pay

Usually a service fee and discount charge, sometimes with setup, audit or minimum fees depending on the facility.

Service feeDiscount chargeFacility terms
Pricing driverWhat changes the quote

Debtor strength, invoice age, dilution risk, volume, sector, contract evidence and ledger discipline all move pricing.

Debtor qualityLedger behaviourEvidence strength
Decision shortcutUse this page for

Reading quote terms, spotting expensive structures and knowing what to improve before applying.

Compare quotesAvoid surprisesImprove terms
Decision guide

What actually changes invoice finance cost.

The cost is not just a headline percentage. Pricing improves when the debtor book is clean, customers are creditworthy, invoices are evidenced, and the facility is used predictably.

Primary driverDebtor quality

Established customers with clear payment history usually strengthen pricing.

Evidence driverInvoice evidence

Clean delivery evidence and low disputes improve the case.

Main watch-outService level

Comparing headline rates without service scope is misleading.

Cost driverUsually stronger whenWatch-out
Debtor qualityEstablished customers with clear payment history usually strengthen pricing.Weak, concentrated or hard-to-contact debtors increase risk.
Invoice evidenceClean delivery evidence and low disputes improve the case.Missing proof, credit notes and disputes can reduce availability.
Facility useRegular, predictable use is easier to price.Irregular emergency use is usually harder to assess.
Service levelFactoring support and protection features affect total cost.Comparing headline rates without service scope is misleading.