What Is the Minimum Turnover for Invoice Finance?
Most UK providers require £50,000 annual turnover (approximately £4,200/month in invoicing). Some specialist providers accept lower turnover. For selective/spot factoring, there's often no minimum turnover - just a minimum invoice size of £1,000-£5,000. Below £50,000 turnover, the fees may not be cost-effective.
Why This Matters
Minimum turnover thresholds determine whether invoice finance is accessible to your business and at what cost. Most traditional providers set a £50,000 annual turnover floor because lower volumes don't generate enough fee income to cover their administrative costs and risk assessment. This threshold effectively excludes micro-businesses and newer startups from whole-ledger facilities. However, the landscape has diversified significantly. Specialist fintech lenders like Kriya and platforms offering selective invoice finance now serve businesses below traditional minimums, sometimes accepting companies invoicing £10,000-£20,000 annually if the customer base is strong. The practical reality is that even when approved below £50,000 turnover, you'll typically face higher percentage fees (2-5% per invoice versus 1-3% for larger businesses) and more restrictive terms. For genuine micro-enterprises turning over £30,000 annually, invoice finance rarely makes economic sense compared to bridging cash gaps through a business overdraft or director loans. Understanding these thresholds helps you identify whether invoice finance is the right funding mechanism for your current scale, or whether you should wait until turnover increases.
Key Points
- Standard minimum: £50,000 annual turnover (£4,200 monthly invoicing) for whole-ledger invoice discounting or factoring with providers like Close Brothers, Bibby Financial Services, and Ultimate Finance
- Specialist lower thresholds: Some fintech providers including Kriya and Sonovate accept businesses from £20,000-£30,000 annual turnover, particularly in recruitment, staffing, and professional services sectors
- Selective/spot factoring typically requires no minimum business turnover, but individual invoices must exceed £1,000-£5,000 depending on provider (Triver and Pulse Cashflow often start at £5,000 per invoice)
- Below £50,000 turnover, expect fees of 2.5-5% per invoice plus 1-2% monthly discount charge, making the effective annual cost 15-25% of invoice values financed
- High street banks (Lloyds Bank Invoice Finance, HSBC Invoice Finance, Barclays Invoice Finance) typically require £100,000+ annual turnover and established trading history of 2+ years
- Growth-stage businesses between £30,000-£50,000 turnover often find better value in unsecured business overdrafts (8-15% APR) than invoice finance, unless facing consistent 60-90 day payment terms from major customers
- Turnover alone doesn't guarantee approval: providers assess customer concentration (no single debtor should exceed 25-30% of sales), debtor quality, and sector risk alongside minimum thresholds
Real-World Example
A Leeds-based digital marketing consultancy turning over £42,000 annually invoices three main clients (a regional council, a national retailer, and a manufacturing firm) on 45-day payment terms, creating regular cash flow gaps that prevent hiring a second consultant
Traditional providers declined due to sub-£50,000 turnover. The consultancy approached Kriya, which approved selective financing for the retailer and council invoices (80% of £18,000 in qualifying receivables). Fees totalled 3.2% per invoice plus 1.5% monthly discount charge. While more expensive than a business overdraft, it released £14,400 within 48 hours, enabling the consultancy to hire and increase capacity. Within eight months, turnover reached £68,000, qualifying for lower-cost whole-ledger facilities with Ultimate Finance at 1.8% service charge.
Common Pitfalls
- Applying to high street bank invoice finance divisions when turning over under £100,000 - these applications are auto-declined and can leave credit footprints that affect subsequent applications to specialist providers
- Assuming your £45,000 turnover qualifies because a broker claims 'we work with all business sizes' - brokers often don't verify minimum thresholds until after credit checks, wasting time and potentially impacting credit files
- Ignoring the economics: if you're invoicing £40,000 annually and finance 80% at 4% per invoice, you'll pay £1,280-£1,600 in fees for around £32,000 in funding - often worse value than a £10,000 business overdraft at 12% APR costing £1,200 annually
- Confusing minimum turnover with minimum facility size - a provider accepting £50,000 turnover businesses might still impose a £20,000 minimum facility, requiring you to pledge more invoices than you need to draw down
- Overlooking that 'no minimum turnover' for selective factoring means per-invoice minimums of £5,000+ - if your average invoice is £1,500, you can't access these facilities regardless of total business turnover
What to Do Next
- Calculate your actual monthly invoicing rate (total annual turnover ÷ 12) and identify what percentage represents B2B trade invoices to creditworthy businesses, as consumer sales and cash transactions don't qualify
- If you're between £30,000-£50,000 turnover, request quotes from both specialist invoice finance providers (Kriya, Sonovate, Pulse Cashflow) and compare total costs against a business overdraft from your bank or challenger providers
- For turnover below £30,000, focus on alternative short-term funding: business credit cards (0% introductory periods), trade credit from suppliers (negotiate 60-day terms), or director loans, revisiting invoice finance once turnover exceeds £50,000
- If your turnover exceeds £50,000 but consists of many small invoices (under £1,000), confirm that providers will accept your invoice profile, as some impose minimum average invoice values of £2,000-£3,000 even when turnover thresholds are met
- Document your debtor base and payment history for the past 6-12 months - providers assess customer concentration and payment behaviour alongside turnover, and strong debtor quality can sometimes override borderline turnover figures
Related Questions
Can I get invoice finance with £25,000 annual turnover?
Possible but rare. Kriya and some specialist fintech lenders occasionally accept businesses invoicing £20,000-£30,000 annually if debtors are recognisable brands or public sector bodies. Fees will be high (3-5% per invoice). Most businesses at this turnover level find better value in business overdrafts or microfinance loans until revenue grows above £50,000.
Do all invoice finance providers calculate turnover the same way?
No. Most measure annual B2B invoiced sales excluding VAT and non-trade income. Some providers focus on qualifying turnover (invoices to creditworthy business customers only), excluding consumer sales, intercompany invoices, and contra arrangements. Always clarify whether a provider wants total company turnover or specifically invoiced B2B credit sales when assessing eligibility.
What happens if my turnover drops below the minimum after approval?
Most agreements include minimum usage or turnover clauses. If invoicing falls below thresholds for 2-3 consecutive months, providers may increase fees, reduce your facility limit, or issue termination notice (typically 30-90 days). Some impose monthly minimum fees (£200-£500) regardless of usage. Review your agreement for material adverse change clauses that allow providers to withdraw or reprice facilities.
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