Guide: Selling invoices - for businesses
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No entry fee
No binding time
No hidden costs
If you have a business with a lot of invoicing, you know that liquidity and cash flow are key! Long payment terms of 30, 60 or 90 days can put a stop to your growth. That's why some entrepreneurs take the opportunity to sell their invoices.
Avoid fees and long contracts with volume requirements - apply for a business loan with Qred Bank instead!
Feel the freedom to choose the amount you want to borrow within the credit limit you get approved for. Avoid long lead times and payment times to get invoices you want to sell approved - a business loan with Qred is paid out the same day!
Selling your invoices can be a good idea to solve liquidity and cash flow issues over a longer period of time, but if you need to make larger investments to grow, a business loan is often a better option.
Factoring means you can borrow money using your customer invoices as collateral, which is great for businesses that need to improve their liquidity. With invoice factoring, you can get up to 100% of the invoice amount minus a fee of 1.5-3%, while factoring usually provides 70-80%. Reverse factoring, where a factoring company pays your debts, can provide longer payment terms and improve liquidity for smaller suppliers.
Factoring means that you can borrow money against the security you have in your customer invoices. Invoice factoring is a good way to get cash, for example when you can't get a loan from the bank or when you are expanding and need to temporarily boost liquidity.
Typically, invoice discounting allows you to borrow between 70-80% of the invoice amount while invoice purchase offers you 100% of the invoice amount minus the fee. The fee is often between 1.5 - 3% of the invoice amount. The interest rate is based on the loan-to-value ratio and invoice risk.
Things that negatively affect interest rates are
Things that have a positive impact on interest rates are
Alternatives to selling your bills can be business loans for larger investments line of credit for cash flow or a business card for the more everyday expenses.
Like regular factoring but in reverse?
Normally, a company can sell its invoices to a finance company that pays the money directly. In reverse factoring, supplier financing or reverse factoring, the debtor is the initiator - not the supplier (the one selling the invoice).
In most cases, the debtor wants longer payment terms.
It starts with the debtor contacting the factoring company or finance company to see if they can get the invoice debts to their suppliers financed. The factoring company then makes a credit assessment of the debtor. An approval for reverse factoring, supplier financing or reverse factoring is only given if the debtor has a very good payment capacity and creditworthiness. This is because most factoring companies and finance companies, but also banks, guarantee non-recourse factoring for all invoices they purchase.
If an agreement is reached, the company receives a credit up to a certain amount. The agreement must be signed between the company receiving the credit, the supplier and the factoring company.
As a company, you get a kind of revolving credit similar to an overdraft facility. This is usually a cheaper financing solution, but it is relatively difficult and unusual to resolve. The positive aspect of reverse factoring is that the supplier will always be paid by the factoring company and this therefore reduces the risk of the arrangement.
There are often problems, especially in the construction industry, around payment times. Many large companies have long payment terms that put smaller subcontractors at a disadvantage as they have to spend a lot of money on staff, materials, vehicles, machinery, etc.
As of March 1, 2022, companies with more than 249 employees will be required to report their payment terms to their subcontractors.
Payment times must be reported separately for subcontractors as well:
If your company uses reverse factoring, you have to report these data separately. This means that you have to report nine additional data if you use reverse factoring for all three size categories of companies.
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