Skipton Business Finance Review
Market Invoice is an independent UK invoice finance comparison site that ranks Skipton Business Finance against 85 active UK lenders.
Skipton Business Finance offers invoice factoring and discounting from 0.5% service charge with advance rates up to 90%, for UK businesses with annual turnover from £100,000. As a wholly-owned subsidiary of Skipton Building Society (the UK's fourth-largest, established 1853, with £30 billion+ assets), Skipton combines joint-lowest UK pricing with mutual society values. Confidential invoice discounting available from approximately £500,000 turnover. Setup is typically 7 working days.
Last updated: 5 May 2026.
Skipton Business Finance is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Skipton Building Society, the UK's fourth-largest mutual. They offer invoice factoring from £100k turnover at 0.5% starting service charge, joint-cheapest in the UK alongside Close Brothers.
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Summary
Skipton Business Finance is the building society-backed alternative to bank-owned invoice finance providers. Mutual society parent (founded 1853, £30bn+ assets) means profits return to members rather than shareholders. Starting fee 0.5% (joint-lowest in UK alongside Close Brothers). Min turnover £100k for factoring, £500k for confidential discounting. 4.4/5 rating from Market Invoice. Alternatives: Close Brothers (also 0.5% from £50k), Aldermore (0.7% from £250k), Bibby (0.75% from £50k).
This page covers
Skipton Business Finance products, rates, eligibility, parent building society, FCA status, and how Skipton compares to alternatives like Close Brothers, Aldermore and Bibby
Not covered here
General invoice finance education (see /guides/), individual sector pages (see /industries/), full provider directory (see /providers/)
Key Facts
Skipton vs Alternatives
| Provider | Fee from | Min turnover | Type | Confidential ID min |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Skipton Business Finance | 0.5% | £100k | Building society | £500k |
| Close Brothers | 0.5% | £50k | FTSE 250 bank | £500k |
| Aldermore | 0.7% | £250k | Challenger bank | £250k |
| Bibby | 0.75% | £50k | Independent | £500k |
Pros and Cons
Strengths
- Joint-lowest UK starting rate (0.5%)
- Backed by 173-year-old building society
- £30bn+ parent asset base for capital security
- Mutual society values (member-owned)
- Good relationship management for owner-managed businesses
- Transparent fee structure, no hidden charges
Limitations
- Higher minimum turnover (£100k) than Close Brothers (£50k)
- Slower setup than Ultimate Finance (7 days vs 3)
- No specialist construction or recruitment team
- Limited international/export capability
- Smaller team than Bibby or Close Brothers
Who Is Skipton Best For?
Skipton Business Finance is a strong value choice for established UK SMEs with annual turnover above £100,000 who want competitive pricing from a financially secure mutual society. Their 0.5% starting rate matches Close Brothers as the joint-lowest in market, and the building society backing provides member-aligned reassurance. They are particularly well-suited to owner-managed businesses in manufacturing, wholesale, professional services, and engineering where relationship continuity matters.
They lack the specialist sector teams of larger providers, so for construction, recruitment-only or international export needs, look at Bibby, Sonovate or HSBC respectively. For businesses below the £100k turnover threshold, Close Brothers (£50k+) or IGF (no minimum) are the closest alternatives.
Our Verdict
Skipton Business Finance is one of the best-value invoice finance choices in the UK for businesses comfortably above the £100,000 turnover threshold. The combination of joint-lowest 0.5% starting rate, mutual society backing with £30bn+ parent assets, and 173 years of institutional history puts them in the same tier as Close Brothers on safety and price. The £100k minimum and absence of sector-specialist teams are the main reasons not to choose them; for businesses that fit, they are an excellent default.
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 May 2026