Can Invoice Finance Help Me Win Larger Tenders?
Yes. Many tenders require evidence of working capital or cash flow capability. An invoice finance facility demonstrates to the buyer that you can fund the contract. Some providers will issue a comfort letter confirming your facility, which you can include in tender submissions. This is particularly valuable in construction and government contracts.
Why This Matters
Winning a large tender can transform a UK SME, but many businesses discover too late that securing the contract and delivering it are different challenges. Public sector and corporate tenders often require bidders to demonstrate financial standing, working capital adequacy, or the ability to finance 30-90 day payment cycles while covering labour, materials and subcontractors upfront. A construction firm bidding for a £500k local authority contract might need £150k working capital immediately, yet their balance sheet shows £40k. Invoice finance facilities provide pre-approved credit lines that scale with invoiced work, allowing businesses to credibly bid for contracts 3-5 times larger than their existing cash reserves would support. Crucially, procurement teams assess financial risk during tender evaluation. A formal facility agreement from Close Brothers or Bibby Financial Services signals creditworthiness and delivery capacity, often making the difference between shortlisting and rejection. For businesses in sectors like construction, facilities management, recruitment and IT services where contract values routinely exceed monthly turnover, invoice finance isn't just helpful for winning tenders, it's often essential infrastructure.
Key Points
- Public sector contracts (central government, NHS, councils) typically pay on 30-day terms but procurement teams require evidence you can finance delivery without payment, particularly for contracts exceeding £100k.
- Many tender applications include PQQ (Pre-Qualification Questionnaire) financial health checks asking for cash flow forecasts, working capital statements, or confirmation of funding facilities.
- Invoice finance providers like Aldermore, Skipton Business Finance and Ultimate Finance will issue comfort letters or facility confirmation documents specifically for tender submissions, verifying your available funding.
- Construction and facilities management tenders often require performance bonds or parent company guarantees, but an invoice finance facility can reduce or eliminate these requirements by demonstrating financial resilience.
- The facility scales automatically as contract invoices grow, meaning a £250k facility can support a £1m annual contract if invoices are released progressively, unlike a fixed term loan.
- Procurement scoring matrices typically award points for financial stability, and a formal facility from a recognised lender (Lloyds Bank Invoice Finance, HSBC Invoice Finance, Barclays Invoice Finance) carries more weight than director guarantees or unaudited accounts.
- Sectors with long payment cycles (government suppliers, construction subcontractors, recruitment agencies supplying public sector) report that invoice finance directly enabled bids 200-400% larger than previous contract values.
Real-World Example
A Birmingham-based facilities management company with £800k annual turnover and two permanent staff bids for a three-year NHS facilities contract worth £2.1m (£700k annually). The tender requires evidence of working capital to cover four weeks of payroll, materials and subcontractor costs (approximately £54k) before first payment.
The business secured a £300k selective invoice finance facility with Secure Trust Bank, disclosing only the NHS contract invoices. They included the facility confirmation letter in their tender submission, demonstrating financial capacity. They won the contract, drew £45k against the first month's invoice within 24 hours of issuing it, paid their 12 new operatives on time, and maintained 15% cash reserves throughout. The facility cost 0.4% per week on funds used (equivalent to 2.4% on a six-week funding cycle), totalling around £8k annually, but generated £210k gross profit over three years.
Common Pitfalls
- Assuming any facility will do: procurement teams may discount facilities from unregulated or offshore lenders. Stick to established UK names like Novuna Business Finance, Time Finance, or bank-owned providers for maximum tender credibility.
- Requesting the comfort letter too late: some providers need 5-10 working days to issue formal tender documentation. Request it when you start the tender, not 48 hours before submission deadline.
- Ignoring facility utilisation requirements: some agreements require minimum monthly usage or charge non-utilisation fees. A facility arranged purely for tender credibility that sits unused may cost 0.15-0.25% monthly on the undrawn amount.
- Failing to check whether the client (e.g. NHS trust, local authority) is on the lender's approved debtor list: not all invoice finance providers will fund invoices to every public body, particularly smaller councils or newly formed trusts.
- Overlooking personal guarantee implications: most facilities require director guarantees. If the contract fails and invoices become bad debts, you remain personally liable for advances already drawn.
What to Do Next
- Identify upcoming tenders and note their financial evidence requirements (PQQ financial questions, working capital statements, audited accounts thresholds). Central government contracts over £138,760 are advertised on Find a Tender Service (formerly OJEU).
- Approach 2-3 providers from the allowlist (particularly those with public sector experience like Close Brothers, Bibby Financial Services, or bank-owned providers) and request an indicative facility quote based on your projected contract invoices, not just existing turnover.
- Ask explicitly for a comfort letter or facility confirmation document suitable for tender inclusion. Confirm turnaround time and whether the document references specific contract capacity (e.g. 'facility supports contracts up to £X').
- Review the facility's debtor approval process: will the tender client (e.g. specific NHS trust, council, or corporate) be automatically approved, or will they need credit checking? Some public bodies are pre-approved across most lenders.
- Model the true cost: if the contract invoices £60k monthly and pays in 45 days, and you draw 85% (£51k) for 45 days at 0.5% per week, your funding cost is approximately £4,590 annually (£51k × 0.5% × 6.4 weeks × 12 months ÷ 12). Compare this to lost opportunity cost of not bidding.
Related Questions
Do all invoice finance providers issue comfort letters for tenders?
Most established UK providers (Close Brothers, Aldermore, Bibby Financial Services, Skipton Business Finance) will issue formal facility confirmation letters for tender purposes, typically at no cost if you have an active agreement. Smaller or newer fintech lenders may not offer standardised tender documentation. Always confirm this capability during initial facility discussions, particularly if tendering is your primary reason for the facility.
Can I get invoice finance approved before winning the contract?
Yes. Most providers will offer a facility in principle based on your existing sales ledger and the projected contract invoices, subject to final debtor approval once you win. Some (like Lloyds Bank Invoice Finance, HSBC Invoice Finance) will pre-approve major public sector debtors like NHS trusts or government departments, giving you certainty before tender submission. The facility activates only when you start invoicing.
What if the tender requires a performance bond and I cannot afford one?
Invoice finance does not replace performance bonds, but demonstrating a working capital facility may reduce the bond percentage required (e.g. from 10% to 5% of contract value) as it proves financial resilience. Some specialist providers like Bibby Financial Services or eCapital offer integrated bonding solutions. Alternatively, the facility funds your cashflow so you can afford the bond premium from operating income rather than upfront capital.
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: 6 April 2026