Invoice finance vs a business loan — which fits a growing UK company
Two of the most common ways UK limited companies and LLPs fund growth are invoice finance and a term business loan. This guide explains how each works, where they differ, and how to decide — from Credicorp, an exempt business lender serving incorporated businesses only.
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The short answer
If your growth is held back by the gap between raising an invoice and being paid, invoice finance releases cash tied up in your sales ledger. If you need a lump sum for a defined purpose — new equipment, a hire, an expansion — repaid over a set term, a business loan is usually the better fit. Many growing companies use both at different stages.
How invoice finance works
Invoice finance advances a percentage of the value of your unpaid B2B invoices — typically up to 80–90% — within a day or two of you raising them. When your customer pays, you receive the balance, less the finance charge. It is a revolving facility: as you invoice more, more funding becomes available, so it scales with your turnover.
Best for: businesses that sell to other businesses on credit terms (30, 60 or 90 days) and want to unlock working capital sooner.
Funding line grows with sales — the facility is linked to your ledger, not a fixed amount agreed once.
Two main forms: factoring, where the provider also manages collections, and confidential invoice discounting, where you keep credit control in-house.
How a term business loan works
A term loan gives you a single, agreed lump sum up front, repaid in scheduled instalments over a fixed period. The amount, rate and term are set at the outset, so your repayments are predictable and easy to budget around — useful when you are financing a specific, one-off investment.
Best for: capital projects with a clear cost — equipment, premises fit-out, a key hire, or acquiring stock ahead of a large contract.
Predictable repayments — a fixed schedule makes cash-flow planning straightforward.
Not tied to your invoicing — the funding is available whether or not you have a receivables ledger.
Comparing the two side by side
Consideration
Invoice finance
Term business loan
What you receive
Advance against unpaid invoices
A one-off lump sum
How it scales
Grows as your sales ledger grows
Fixed amount agreed up front
Repayment
Settled as your customers pay
Scheduled instalments over a set term
Typical use
Bridging the invoice-to-payment gap
A defined capital investment
Requirement
B2B invoices on credit terms
Ability to service fixed repayments
Which fits a growing company?
Choose invoice finance if…
Long customer payment terms are the main thing squeezing your cash flow.
Your funding need rises and falls with sales, and you want a line that flexes with it.
You want to fund day-to-day operations, payroll or supplier payments without waiting to be paid.
Choose a business loan if…
You have a specific, one-off cost and want a lump sum up front.
Predictable, fixed repayments suit how you plan and budget.
You sell largely to consumers or on immediate payment, so there is little receivables ledger to finance.
How Credicorp lends
Credicorp lends exclusively to UK limited companies and LLPs registered at Companies House. Our lending is commercial, provided to incorporated businesses and falls outside FCA consumer-credit regulation under the exemptions in the FSMA (Regulated Activities) Order 2001 — including the large-company exemption (Article 60B) and the high-net-worth exemption (Article 60L). Because we assess your company directly rather than an individual consumer, decisions are faster; note that the consumer-credit protections that apply to personal borrowing do not apply to this commercial lending.
Company-only underwriting — we assess your business's trading history, financials and capacity to repay, not personal circumstances.
Loans from £10,000 to £250,000 — eligibility and terms depend on your cash flow and trading record.
Transparent, upfront terms — your personalised rate and any fees are confirmed in writing before you commit, with no hidden charges.
No personal guarantee on standard facilities — lending is assessed on company financials; where one is ever needed, you are told before it is requested.
Still unsure?
The right choice depends on your sales model, how quickly you are paid, and what you are funding. If you are financing a defined investment, a term loan is usually simplest; if the pinch is the wait to be paid, releasing cash from your ledger tends to work better. Our team can talk through which structure fits your company before you apply.
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