Accounts Receivable Financing for Businesses
Accounts receivable financing gives businesses a way to convert outstanding invoices into immediate working capital without waiting for customers to pay on their standard net-30, net-60, or net-90 terms. This page covers the definition and structural scope of accounts receivable financing, the mechanics of how transactions are structured, the business scenarios where it applies, and the decision boundaries that separate it from alternative tools like business lines of credit or term loans. Understanding these distinctions matters because the cost, control, and regulatory treatment of each structure differ in ways that directly affect cash flow strategy and balance sheet presentation.
Definition and scope
Accounts receivable financing is a category of asset-based finance in which a business uses its outstanding invoices — amounts owed by customers for goods or services already delivered — as the basis for obtaining cash. The financing party (a lender or factor) provides funds secured by or purchased outright from those receivables, rather than from general creditworthiness or fixed collateral.
The category encompasses two structurally distinct instruments:
- Invoice factoring: The business sells its receivables to a third party (the factor) at a discount. Legal ownership of the invoice transfers. The factor assumes collection responsibility and, in non-recourse arrangements, absorbs the credit risk of customer nonpayment.
- Invoice financing (accounts receivable lending): The business retains ownership of invoices and borrows against them as collateral. The business remains responsible for collection. Upon customer payment, the loan is repaid and any margin is released.
The distinction matters for accounting treatment. Under U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) — specifically FASB ASC 860, Transfers and Servicing — a transaction qualifies as a sale (factoring) only when control of the receivable is surrendered. Transactions that fail the "true sale" test remain on-balance-sheet as secured borrowings.
The Small Business Administration (SBA) recognizes accounts receivable as eligible collateral under its general collateral guidance for 7(a) loans, placing receivable-backed financing within the broader landscape of business lending and loan options available to U.S. businesses.
How it works
The operational sequence differs between factoring and receivable lending, but both begin with invoice origination.
Accounts receivable lending — typical process:
- Invoice issuance: The business delivers goods or services and issues an invoice to the customer.
- Submission and verification: The business submits eligible invoices to the lender. The lender verifies invoice authenticity, customer creditworthiness, and absence of liens or disputes.
- Advance funding: The lender advances a percentage of the invoice face value — commonly 70% to 90%, depending on industry, debtor credit quality, and portfolio concentration — directly to the business.
- Customer payment: The customer pays the invoice on its original terms, often directly into a lender-controlled lockbox account.
- Settlement: The lender deducts fees and interest, then remits the remaining reserve to the business.
Factoring — key divergence at step 2: The factor purchases the invoice rather than lending against it. The factor then contacts the customer directly (in notification factoring) or operates without customer notification (in non-notification or "confidential" factoring). Advance rates in factoring typically range from 70% to 85% of face value, with the factor's discount fee — sometimes called the factoring rate — running approximately 1% to 5% of invoice value per 30-day period, depending on customer credit risk and volume (structure varies by agreement; no single regulatory rate applies).
Lenders operating in this space may be regulated as commercial lenders under state banking statutes or as commercial finance companies. The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), Article 9, governs the perfection of security interests in accounts receivable for lending transactions, and Article 9 filings (UCC-1 financing statements) are publicly searchable through state filing offices. Factoring transactions structured as true sales may be governed by UCC Article 9 as well, under the 2001 amendments that brought outright sales of accounts within Article 9's scope.
Common scenarios
Accounts receivable financing appears across industries where invoice payment cycles create a structural gap between revenue recognition and cash receipt. The following scenarios represent the most documented use patterns:
- Staffing and professional services firms: Payroll obligations fall weekly or biweekly; client invoices settle in 45–60 days. Factoring bridges this gap without requiring the firm to carry a large revolving credit facility.
- Manufacturing and wholesale distribution: Large purchase orders from national retailers or government buyers can stretch payment terms to 90 days or more. Receivable financing lets manufacturers restock and fulfill new orders without waiting for prior-cycle payments.
- Government contractors: Payments from federal and state agencies are reliable but slow. Contractors with certified claims pending payment from agencies operating under the Prompt Payment Act (31 U.S.C. § 3901–3907) sometimes use factoring while awaiting statutory payment deadlines.
- Startups and growth-stage companies: Businesses with limited credit history but established B2B customers can access capital through receivable quality rather than balance sheet strength. This connects directly to the broader considerations covered in startup financial services.
- Seasonal businesses: Businesses with concentrated revenue periods use receivable financing to level cash flow. For sector-specific patterns, industry-specific financial services provides additional context.
Decision boundaries
Accounts receivable financing is not universally appropriate. Four structural boundaries define when it applies versus when alternative instruments serve better.
1. Recourse vs. non-recourse factoring
In recourse factoring, if the customer fails to pay, the business must buy back the invoice or replace it. In non-recourse factoring, the factor absorbs credit loss on customer insolvency (though disputes and dilution typically remain the seller's risk). Non-recourse structures carry higher discount fees because the factor prices in credit risk.
2. Notification vs. non-notification
Notification factoring requires the customer to be informed that invoices have been assigned or sold. Non-notification arrangements — where the business continues to collect on the factor's behalf — preserve confidentiality but typically command higher rates and require demonstrated collection performance. Businesses concerned about customer relationships often weigh this boundary carefully before engaging invoice factoring services.
3. Accounts receivable financing vs. a business line of credit
A business line of credit provides revolving access to funds based on general creditworthiness, with receivables as one of several possible collateral types. Receivable financing is specifically tied to invoice balances — availability rises and falls with the receivable ledger. Businesses with strong credit and diversified collateral often find lines of credit cheaper on an annualized basis; businesses with weak credit but strong customers often find receivable financing more accessible.
4. Eligibility constraints
Not all receivables qualify. Lenders and factors typically exclude invoices that are: past due beyond a defined threshold (commonly 90 days), owed by affiliated or related parties, subject to offset rights or retainage, or concentrated beyond portfolio limits (a single customer representing more than 20%–25% of receivables may trigger concentration haircuts). These constraints align with standard asset-based lending underwriting practices documented in guidance from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) on asset-based lending.
For businesses evaluating the full landscape of working capital options — including factoring, lines of credit, SBA programs, and equipment-backed structures — the financial-services-industry-overview-us and business cash flow management services pages provide comparative framing across instrument types.
References
- Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) — ASC 860, Transfers and Servicing
- Uniform Law Commission — Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), Articles 9
- U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) — Collateral and Loan Programs
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) — Comptroller's Handbook: Asset-Based Lending
- Electronic Code of Federal Regulations — Prompt Payment Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3901–3907