Is Invoice Finance Expensive?
It depends what you are comparing it to. On paper, invoice finance costs 0.5-3% of your invoice value — which adds up to roughly 1-2.4% of your annual turnover. That is more expensive than a bank overdraft. But here is the thing: most businesses using invoice finance cannot get an overdraft. And the real cost of not having cash — turning down work, paying suppliers late, missing payroll — is almost always higher than 2%.
Quick Reference
Direct Answer
Invoice finance costs 0.5-3% service charge per invoice plus interest on the advance (base rate + 1-3%). Total effective cost is typically 1-2.4% of annual turnover. 63% of providers charge under 2% service fee. It is more expensive than a bank overdraft (3-8% APR) but cheaper than short-term loans (15-40% APR) or merchant cash advances (30-60% effective APR).
Summary
The perception that invoice finance is expensive often comes from comparing it to products that are unavailable (overdrafts) rather than the real alternatives. Cost comparison: invoice finance effective cost 5-15% APR, overdraft 3-8% APR (if available), short-term loan 15-40% APR, merchant cash advance 30-60% effective APR. The hidden costs of NOT using invoice finance: lost contracts (cannot fund new work), late payment penalties from suppliers, damaged supplier relationships, and the stress cost of cash flow uncertainty.
This Page Covers
Real cost of invoice finance compared to alternatives, the hidden costs of not having cash flow, and how to reduce invoice finance fees
Not Covered Here
Detailed fee breakdown with examples (see /guides/costs/), cost calculator (see /calculator/), provider comparison by price (see /compare/)
What It Actually Costs
A typical business: £500,000 annual turnover, 85% advance, 45-day payment terms
That works out at roughly £900/month. For full worked examples, see our cost breakdown guide.
Compared to What?
"Expensive" only means something relative to the alternative. Here is how invoice finance stacks up:
| Option | Typical Cost | Availability |
|---|---|---|
| Bank overdraft | 3-8% APR (cheapest) | Shrinking — banks cutting limits |
| Invoice finance | 5-15% effective APR | Widely available, £50k+ turnover |
| Short-term business loan | 15-40% APR | Available but credit-dependent |
| Merchant cash advance | 30-60% effective APR | Card payments only |
The Costs Nobody Talks About
Business owners fixate on the invoice finance fee, but rarely calculate what poor cash flow is already costing them:
Turning down work because you cannot fund the materials or labour upfront. If your margin is 20% and you turn down a £50,000 contract, that is £10,000 of profit gone.
Losing early payment discounts from your suppliers. If a supplier offers 2% off for payment within 10 days and you cannot take it because you are waiting on your own invoices, that is 2% lost every time.
Late payment penalties to HMRC, suppliers, or landlords. Late VAT payments cost 2-4% in penalties. Bounced direct debits cost £10-35 each plus the embarrassment.
Your time chasing payment instead of winning new business. If you spend 5 hours a week on credit control at a £50/hour opportunity cost, that is £13,000 a year.
How to Pay Less
Invoice finance does not have to cost 3%. Here is how to get a better rate:
- 1.Get 3 quotes — providers compete on price when they know you are comparing. Use our free comparison.
- 2.Improve your debtor quality — invoicing FTSE 100 or government customers gets you the best rates
- 3.Increase volume — more invoices = more leverage to negotiate lower percentages
- 4.Choose confidential discounting — providers often charge less because they do not need a collections team
- 5.Use our calculator to model the real cost for your specific business
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