Invoice Finance for Scaffolding Companies
Scaffolding is one of the most cash-hungry trades in construction. You need scaffolders on site for erection, weekly inspections, and eventual dismantling — often across multiple sites simultaneously. Tube and fitting or system scaffold is expensive to buy and maintain. Transport costs are high. And you're waiting 49+ days on average for the main contractor to pay your application. Invoice finance is how most growing scaffolding firms survive this.
The Scaffolding Cash Flow Problem
Say you win three scaffolding contracts in one month worth £25,000 each. You need to hire scaffolders (£150-£250/day each), transport scaffold to site, erect it, and maintain it. That's £15,000-£20,000 out of pocket per job before you even invoice. Across three jobs, you're £45,000-£60,000 exposed — and you won't see payment for 7-8 weeks minimum.
The fourth contract comes in and you can't take it. Not because you don't have the scaffold or the labour — but because you don't have the cash. This is where factoring steps in.
How Scaffolders Use Factoring
You submit your application for payment to the main contractor. Once certified, you send it to your factoring provider. They advance 80-90% within 24-48 hours. You use it to fund the next job. When the main contractor pays on day 49 (or 60, or 75...), the provider takes their fee and gives you the balance.
The key for scaffolding is finding a provider who understands construction applications for payment — not just standard invoices. Specialist construction factoring from Bibby, Close Brothers, or Ultimate Finance handles retentions, contra charges, and stage payments properly.
Scaffolding-Specific Issues
- Hire periods vs one-off erection. If you charge a weekly hire rate after erection, the ongoing hire invoices can also be factored. This gives you steady cash flow between the erection payment and the final dismantle.
- Multiple sites. Running 5-10 sites simultaneously multiplies the cash gap. Factoring scales with you — more applications = more available cash.
- NASC membership. Being a member of the National Access & Scaffolding Confederation can help your application. It signals professionalism to the factoring provider.
- Insurance costs. Scaffolding insurance premiums are high. Having steady cash flow from factoring means you can pay annual premiums upfront (often discounted) rather than monthly instalments.
Oliver Mackman
Director, Market Invoice
Oliver leads Market Invoice's editorial and comparison research. With a background in UK commercial finance, he oversees provider analysis, rate verification, and industry reporting across all verticals.
Last reviewed: 5 April 2026