Construction businesses build things for a living. But some of the most complex structures they manage are not buildings — they are cash flow.
The construction industry has a particular combination of factors that makes cash flow management genuinely difficult: long payment cycles, large upfront costs, retention clauses, and the sequential nature of project work. Understanding these challenges is the first step to managing them.
Construction invoicing operates on progress claims — invoices raised at project milestones rather than on delivery of a finished product. These invoices often carry 30, 45, or 60-day payment terms as standard.
For a project spanning several months, this means a business can be continuously funding work weeks or months ahead of collecting payment. The larger the project, the greater the cash exposure.
Many construction contracts include retention provisions — typically 5-10% of each progress payment withheld until project completion and sometimes beyond. For a $1 million project, that is $50,000-$100,000 that may not be released for months after work is complete.
Retention is essentially free financing provided by the subcontractor or builder to the principal. It is a significant contributor to cash flow pressure throughout a project.
Before a construction business can invoice, it often needs to purchase materials, pay subbies, and cover wages — all before the next progress claim is due. On a typical job, a business might be funding several weeks of work before the next invoice is raised and several more before it is paid.
This gap between cash outflow and cash inflow is the core cash flow challenge in construction.
As a head contractor, you have obligations to pay subcontractors on time — often mandated by security of payment legislation in Australia and New Zealand. But you may not have received payment from your own client yet.
This pressure from both sides — paying subbies while waiting for clients to pay — is a defining characteristic of construction cash flow management.
Several approaches help manage construction cash flow:
Invoice finance is well-suited to construction because progress claims are typically raised against creditworthy clients — head contractors, developers, or government entities. These debtors are exactly what makes invoice finance accessible.
FundTap connects to your accounting software and lets you advance funds from outstanding progress claims within hours. You maintain momentum on the project without waiting for each payment cycle to complete.
Construction is a physically demanding industry. Your cash flow management should not add to that burden.