Will My Customers Know I Use Invoice Finance?
Short answer: With invoice discounting, no. With factoring, yes. You get to choose which one you use — and 85% of the £22.7 billion UK market uses the confidential version.
This is the question that stops more businesses from using invoice finance than any other. The worry is that customers will think you're in financial trouble. In reality, invoice finance is standard business practice — but the concern is understandable, especially if you work in professional services or bid for contracts where perceived financial strength matters.
The Two Types — and What Your Customer Sees
Invoice Factoring
Customer IS aware
The finance provider contacts your customer directly to collect payment. Your invoices may carry the provider's name and payment details. Your customer pays the provider, not you.
What the customer sees: A letter introducing the factoring company. Invoices with the provider's bank details. Phone calls or letters from the provider chasing payment.
Who uses it: Mainly smaller businesses (under £500k turnover) who benefit from the provider handling credit control. About 15% of the market.
Invoice Discounting
Customer does NOT know
You manage your own credit control. Your invoices carry your name, your bank details, your branding. Customer payments go to a trust account in your name. The provider is invisible.
What the customer sees: Nothing different. Same invoices, same payment process, same contact person. Completely transparent.
Who uses it: Businesses with £500k+ turnover and their own credit control processes. About 85% of the market.
Does It Actually Matter If They Know?
Less than you think. Invoice finance is used by over 40,000 UK businesses including major corporations. Many of the UK's largest recruitment agencies, construction firms, and manufacturers use it openly. It's a standard financial tool, not a sign of distress.
That said, in some contexts it does matter:
- Tender processes: Some public and private sector contracts ask about your financial arrangements. Factoring may need to be disclosed; confidential discounting usually does not.
- Professional services: If you're a consultancy or law firm, having a factoring company chase your clients for payment would be inappropriate. Discounting is the clear choice here.
- Retail supply chains: Major retailers sometimes view factoring negatively. If you supply Tesco or Sainsbury's, use confidential discounting.
If in doubt, choose discounting. It costs slightly less (no credit control charge), your customer relationship stays the same, and you maintain full control. The only requirement is having your own credit control capability and usually £500,000+ annual turnover.
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