How Does Factoring Work for Service-Based Businesses?
If you run a service business, you might wonder whether factoring is really for you — it’s often described with examples about shipping goods or delivering products. The good news: factoring works very well for service-based businesses. What you’re factoring is the invoice, and a service invoice is just as fundable as a product invoice, as long as the work is done and billed to a business customer.
Service businesses actually tend to have the cash flow profile that factoring helps most. Your biggest cost is usually payroll — your people — and that has to be paid on a strict schedule. Meanwhile, your business clients pay on net-30, net-60, or longer terms. That mismatch between paying your team now and getting paid later is the textbook cash flow gap factoring closes. Staffing agencies, IT and consulting firms, janitorial and facilities companies, security services, marketing agencies, engineering and professional-services firms — all of these factor regularly.
Here’s how it works for a service business in practice. You complete the work — a month of staffing, a consulting engagement, a cleaning contract, an IT project phase — and invoice your client. You submit that invoice to the factor and receive the advance (commonly 80–90%) within a day or so. You use that cash to make payroll and cover overhead without waiting. When your client pays on their terms, the factor releases your reserve minus the fee.
There’s one wrinkle worth knowing: with services, verification centers on proof that the work was actually delivered and accepted, since there’s no physical shipment to point to. That’s why clean documentation matters — signed timesheets, a signed statement of work or service agreement, a completion sign-off, or a client-approved deliverable. The clearer your proof of performance, the smoother the funding. Building a habit of getting client sign-off on completed work helps a lot.
A few practical tips for service businesses: invoice promptly and on a consistent schedule, keep your engagement terms and deliverables documented, and factor invoices to your established, creditworthy clients for the best terms. If you bill on milestones or retainers, talk that through with your factor so they understand your billing rhythm.
So don’t let the “products” framing fool you. If you provide services to businesses, bill them on terms, and feel the squeeze of payroll arriving before client payments do, factoring fits your situation as naturally as it fits any product company — arguably more so.
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How Does Factoring Work for Service-Based Businesses?
If you run a service business, you might wonder whether factoring is really for you — it’s often described with examples about shipping goods or delivering products. The good news: factoring works very well for service-based businesses. What you’re factoring is the invoice, and a service invoice is just as fundable as a product invoice, as long as the work is done and billed to a business customer.
What Questions Should I Ask a Factoring Company?
Walking into the conversation with the right questions puts you in control and quickly separates the straight-shooters from the slippery ones. Here’s a practical checklist to bring with you. A good factor will answer all of these clearly and without hedging.
On cost and fees What is your factoring fee, and exactly how is it structured — flat, or does it increase the longer an invoice is unpaid? What…What Are Hidden Fees I Should Watch Out For?
This is exactly the right thing to be suspicious about, because the difference between a fair factoring deal and a frustrating one often lives in the fine print. A reputable factor is transparent; your job is to make sure you’re working with one. Here’s what to look for so nothing catches you off guard.
Ask about each of these specifically, even if the factor doesn’t bring them up:
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