2 min read
First, size the problem
Late payment ties up cash you have already earned. Before choosing finance, gauge the shape: is it one big customer holding up a large sum, or many invoices trickling in slowly? Is it a one-off or a permanent feature of your terms? That shape decides the right tool. It is also worth tackling the cause in parallel — see negotiating payment terms and the answer on a big customer paying late.
Option A — Invoice finance
If the problem is structural — you routinely sell B2B on credit terms and wait 30, 60 or 90 days — invoice finance targets it directly, advancing cash against invoices as you raise them and scaling with your ledger. It suits a reliable book of business customers. It is less use for a single disputed invoice or a consumer-facing trade. See our invoice finance guide.
Option B — A revolving line or short-term loan
| Revolving line | Short-term loan | |
|---|---|---|
| Best when | Late payment is occasional | One defined gap to bridge |
| Repaid | As the customer pays | On a set schedule |
| Touches your ledger? | No | No |
If late payment is occasional rather than structural, a revolving line lets you cover the gap and repay when the customer settles, without signing over your ledger. For a single large late invoice, a short-term loan sized to the gap can be simplest. Both keep your customer relationships private, unlike disclosed factoring.
The Credicorp view
If you would rather not tie in your whole sales ledger, a Credicorp Flex line or a short-term business loan bridges late-payment gaps without involving your customers — lent to the company with no personal guarantee. For a structural, ongoing wait, weigh invoice finance too. Register to apply. Educational content, not financial advice.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best finance for late-paying customers?
It depends on the shape of the problem. If you routinely sell B2B on credit terms, invoice finance targets the structural wait and scales with your ledger. If late payment is occasional, a revolving line or a short-term loan bridges the gap without tying in your whole ledger.
Do I have to use invoice finance if customers pay late?
No. Invoice finance suits a structural, ongoing wait across a reliable book of business customers. For an occasional gap or a single large late invoice, a revolving line or a short-term loan can be simpler and keeps your customer relationships private, unlike disclosed factoring.
Can I fix late payment without borrowing at all?
Sometimes, or partly. Tightening your terms, invoicing promptly, chasing early and charging statutory late-payment interest can all help. Finance bridges the immediate gap while you address the cause — the two work best together rather than as either/or.
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Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally — short-term working capital with no personal guarantee. See what your business could access.