If you are a small or medium-sized business owner and need to find a way to improve your cash flow. It may be strategic to consider debtor financing or debtor factoring.

Do you struggle with customers (debtors) taking too long to pay the invoices you sent them? What if you could access funds tied up in your debtor’s book today, to help your business grow? Debtor financing allows you to do just this.

If you’d like to know more about the debtor financing options available to you, here’s a guide:

What is Debtors Financing?


Debtor financing is a type of financing where a financial institution purchases a company’s debtor book. A “debtors book” is just a collection of all of your receivable invoices. This type of finance is also known as Invoice Financing, Invoice Discounting or Factoring. Essentially, it’s a tool that business owners can use to unlock value within their business to improve their cash flow. With debtors factoring, a business can accept longer payment terms from corporate customers. Therefore allowing it to take on more or larger projects. Alternatively, a business can also use debtors factoring to overcome cash flow issues. That is if they’re struggling to survive while they wait for their customers to make payment.

Why apply for debtors factoring instead of an unsecured business loan?


Debtors factoring is a great way for small and medium-sized businesses to get the working capital. The capital may be for anything ranging from solving cash flow issues and accelerating growth. Your debtors book, or receivable invoices, are actually assets. These can serve as collateral enabling you to get more finance at better rates than if you applied for an unsecured business loan which doesn’t require any assets as collateral. Unsecured business loans tend to have high-interest rates.

What are the disadvantages of debtors factoring?


Debtor finance, or debtors factoring, usually involves the selling of a company’s invoices to a factoring company. While debtor factoring is a useful tool for a company struggling with cashflow, it does have some disadvantages:

Disclosure to your customers

Firstly and foremost, the sale of the invoice usually needs to be disclosed to your customers. Your customers are informed that the invoice you issued them has been sold to a factoring company. While there’s nothing inherently wrong with this, some businesses don’t want their customers knowing about their financial situation. They’d rather keep their business finances private.

Redirection of payments

After disclosing the invoice sale to your customers, you will also have to instruct your customers to rather make payment to the factoring company instead of you. The factoring company will, therefore, collect payments directly from your customers. Compromising your relationship with clients and your reputation.

Percentage based financing

The factoring company will usually only advance you a percentage of the total value of your debtors book. This percentage can be anywhere from 65 to 90% but is usually around 75%. For example, if all your debtors owe you a total of R1,000,000 (your “debtors book”), a factoring company might only advance you up to R750,000.

Full debtors book required

Factoring companies will usually require you sell your entire debtors book and won’t accept single invoices at a time. If they do accept single invoices, they’ll usually have to be very large invoices. A debtor’s finance facility is usually only offered if you have a large debtor’s book (over at least R1 million), so it’s not ideal for business owners looking for a smaller cash injection.

Blue-chip customers

Most factoring companies will require you to have large blue-chip corporates as customers in your debtors book. The reason for this is that it is less risky for the factoring company because those customers are more likely to pay your invoices.

Lock-in periods and hidden fees

Factoring companies will typically have very strict lock-in periods for a factoring facility they grant you. There will also be penalty fees if you try to settle your facility early, before the end of your lock-in period.

A better alternative to debtors factoring


If you’re looking for a way to unlock cash stuck in your debtor’s book, you should consider the advantages of Bridgement invoice financing. With invoice financing, you sell your invoice (like debtor factoring) without disclosing to your clients. That means your customer will be completely unaware of your invoice finance from Bridgement. You remain in control of your customer relationships and continue to collect payment from them as you normally would. Unlike traditional debtor factoring, Bridgement advances 100% of the invoice value. What’s more, you can get an advance on a single invoice (instead of your whole debtor’s book) for amounts as low as R10,000. It’s also ok if you don’t have any blue-chip corporate customers.

How Bridgement invoice financing works


With Bridgement, you can get a cash advance on one or all of your invoices, while staying in control of your debtor’s book and your client relationships.

The online application process is quick and simple.

Bridgement has a revolutionary 2-minute application process – no complex forms, no paperwork. You simply create an account and select your accounting or invoicing software. Bridgement will then find all your unpaid invoices and determine the amount of finance you are eligible for. You don’t pay any sort of application fee, and you’re under no obligation to take out any finance after you’re approved.

Once approved, take just what you need.

You could get a facility of between R10,000 and R5,000,000 within 24 hours. Once approved, simply request your invoice advances from your Bridgement dashboard, and the funds will be sent your way immediately.

You pay one transparent fee per invoice.

There are no hidden fees or extra costs – Bridgement will always tell you how much you will be paying upfront. Monthly fees start from as little as 1.7% and will depend on a number of factors including the strength of your invoices and your business situation. We further reward you with an early settlement discount if you decide to settle early.

Try Bridgement Invoice Financing and find out how much you qualify for.

Apply today and get an answer within hours. There’s no application fee or obligation, so it’s certainly worth trying Bridgement invoice financing for yourself. If you’re looking for a convenient way to improve your cash flow, try our 2-minute application process right now.