Business factoring is a financial arrangement where a business sells its outstanding invoices to a third party (a factor) at a discount in exchange for immediate cash. It is also known as invoice factoring or debtor factoring.
Most B2B businesses face a timing gap: they complete work, raise invoices, and then wait 30-90 days for customers to pay. During that wait, wages, materials, and operating costs do not pause.
Business factoring converts that waiting period into immediate cash — the business receives most of the invoice value now, rather than the full amount later.
In recourse factoring (more common), if the customer does not pay, the business must repay the advance. The credit risk stays with the business.
In non-recourse factoring, the factor assumes the credit risk. This is more expensive and less common.
Business factoring fees vary, but typically include a service charge of 0.5-3% of the invoice value plus a discount rate on the advance. Total effective costs depend on how long invoices take to be paid — longer payment cycles mean higher effective costs.
FundTap provides the cash flow benefit of business factoring with greater flexibility: choose individual invoices to fund, no debtor notification, no long-term contract, and funds available within hours through accounting software integration.
For small businesses that want working capital access without the constraints of traditional factoring, this model is worth comparing.