How to Get Out of Invoice Finance
Most invoice finance contracts have a 12-month minimum term with 3 months written notice to terminate. If you leave early, expect to pay 3-6 months of minimum charges as an exit fee. But the process is manageable if you plan ahead.
The Standard Exit Process
1. Check your contract terms
Find the termination clause. Note: minimum term (usually 12 months), notice period (usually 3 months), and any early termination fee. Some contracts auto-renew for another 12 months if you don't give notice in the right window — check this carefully.
2. Give written notice at the right time
Send formal written notice (recorded delivery) at least 3 months before your desired exit date. If your contract ends in December, send notice by September at the latest. Email alone may not count — check what the contract requires.
3. Run down the ledger
During the notice period, stop submitting new invoices to the provider. Let existing advances be repaid as customers pay. The goal is to clear the ledger to zero by your exit date.
4. Discharge the debenture
The provider will have registered a debenture (charge) at Companies House over your assets. Once you've cleared the ledger and settled all fees, they should provide a release letter and file a satisfaction notice at Companies House. Make sure they actually do this — chase it.
What Can Go Wrong
Auto-renewal trap. Many contracts automatically renew for another 12 months if you don't give notice in the exact window specified. If your 12-month term ends in June and requires 3 months notice, you need to give notice by March. Miss that window and you're locked in until the following June.
Minimum charges. Even if you stop submitting invoices, you'll still pay the minimum monthly service charge until the contract ends. Budget for this during the wind-down.
Slow customers. If a customer hasn't paid by your exit date, the provider may keep the advance outstanding (and keep charging interest) until they do. You'll need to pay the advance back yourself or wait for the customer to pay.
Switching costs. If you're moving to a new provider (not leaving invoice finance entirely), the old and new provider need to coordinate the debenture transfer. This can add 5-10 working days. Make sure you have cash reserves to bridge the gap between providers.
How to Avoid Getting Locked In
- Negotiate flexible terms upfront. Some providers offer rolling 30-day contracts or 3-month minimum terms. These cost slightly more but give you freedom. Ultimate Finance and IGF are more flexible on contract length.
- Diary the notice window. On day one of signing, put the notice deadline in your calendar. Set a reminder 4 months before contract end.
- Read the break clause. Some contracts have a break clause at 6 months. Others have none. Know before you sign.
- Ask about exit fees upfront. Get the early termination fee in writing before signing. "3 months minimum charges" is standard. "Full remaining contract value" is predatory — walk away.
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