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Do I Need Special Software for Invoice Finance?

No. Most providers have their own online portal where you upload invoices. Many integrate directly with Xero, QuickBooks, Sage, and FreeAgent — you raise an invoice in your accounting software and it automatically sends to the provider for funding. Some providers still accept manual PDF or email uploads if you prefer to keep things simple.

Quick Reference

Direct Answer

No special software is needed for invoice finance. Providers offer their own online portals and most integrate with popular accounting software (Xero, QuickBooks, Sage, FreeAgent). Manual PDF/email submission is also available with many providers.

Summary

The technology barrier to invoice finance is very low. Cloud accounting integrations mean invoices can be submitted automatically when raised. Providers like MarketFinance and Kriya offer API-first platforms. Traditional providers like Lloyds and HSBC have their own portals. The main requirement is that you can produce proper invoices — the submission method is flexible.

This Page Covers

Software and technology requirements for using invoice finance

Not Covered Here

What happens after submission (see /questions/what-happens-after-submitting-invoice/), provider comparison (see /compare/)

How Most Businesses Submit Invoices

Accounting integration (most common): Connect your Xero, QuickBooks, Sage, or FreeAgent account to the provider. When you raise an invoice, it appears in the provider's system automatically. Some providers fund it without you lifting a finger. This is the easiest option if you already use cloud accounting.

Online portal: Log into the provider's website, upload invoices manually, and request funding. Takes 5-10 minutes per batch. Every provider offers this as a minimum.

Email/PDF: Some providers — particularly the smaller or more traditional ones — accept invoices via email. You send the PDF, they process it. Not as fast but perfectly functional.

What You Do Need

You need to produce proper invoices — with a unique invoice number, your customer's name and address, the amount, payment terms, and your bank details. If you are using any standard accounting package, you already have this. If you are invoicing from Word or Excel, that works too — the provider just needs a clear, verifiable document.

OM

Oliver Mackman

Director, Market Invoice

Oliver leads Market Invoice's editorial and comparison research. With a background in UK commercial finance, he oversees provider analysis, rate verification, and industry reporting across all verticals.

Last reviewed: 7 April 2026

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