Funds chosen invoices when you need cash without committing the whole debtor book.
Funding comparison · decision guideOption 1Selective finance Option 2Full-ledger facility Decision shortcutUse this rule
Selective vs full-ledger funding.
This is a choice between solving a specific invoice gap and installing an ongoing working-capital facility. The right answer depends on how often the gap repeats and how much of the debtor book you want inside the facility.
Funds across the debtor ledger as an ongoing working-capital structure.
Use selective finance for occasional pinch points. Use full-ledger funding when invoice timing is a recurring constraint.
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.
Selective funding targets one or a small number of invoices.
Useful for a specific large invoice or short-term timing gap.
A full facility may be excessive where the need is genuinely occasional.
| Question | Usually stronger when | Watch-out |
|---|---|---|
| Scope | Selective funding targets one or a small number of invoices. | Full-ledger funding works across the wider debtor book. |
| Best use | Useful for a specific large invoice or short-term timing gap. | Useful where credit terms regularly stretch working capital. |
| Admin | Usually narrower information around the selected invoices. | Requires broader ledger reporting and ongoing discipline. |
| Watch-out | Repeated one-off use can signal that a full facility is more honest. | A full facility may be excessive where the need is genuinely occasional. |

