Both use your unpaid invoices to access money. But how they work — and who your customers deal with — is very different.
Invoice finance: You keep control. You raise the invoice, you collect payment from your customer as normal. The finance provider advances you money against that invoice — and your customer never knows.
Invoice factoring: The factoring company buys your invoice and collects payment from your customer directly. Your customer is notified and pays the factor, not you.
| Feature | Invoice Finance (Fundtap) | Invoice Factoring |
|---|---|---|
| Who collects payment from customers? | You (as normal) | The factoring company |
| Do customers know? | No (confidential) | Yes (they're notified) |
| Control of customer relationship | You keep full control | Shared with factor |
| Whole ledger required? | No (selective) | Usually yes |
| Minimum term | None | Often 6-12 months |
| Fee structure | One flat fee per invoice | % of invoice value + admin fees |
If you want to keep your customer relationships intact and your finance confidential, invoice finance is the right choice. Factoring works for businesses where customer contact from a third party isn’t a concern — but for most SMEs, confidentiality matters.
“Fundtap has been a game-changer for our construction business. We get funded the same day we submit an invoice — no waiting 60 days to pay our subbies.”
Sam T., Construction Business Owner, Auckland
The terms are often used interchangeably in New Zealand and Australia. Debtor finance is the general category; factoring is a specific type where the factor collects from your customers directly.
No. Fundtap is completely confidential. Your customers pay you as normal — Fundtap never contacts them.