When your business needs cash to fulfill orders or bridge payment gaps, two financing tools often come up: purchase order financing and invoice factoring. At first glance, both involve using outstanding business transactions to access capital, but they serve completely different purposes, come with different costs, and work at opposite ends of the order-to-cash cycle. Understanding purchase order financing vs invoice factoring is essential for choosing the right tool at the right time.
This guide breaks down exactly how each option works, what it costs, who qualifies, and which one makes sense for your business situation.
In This Article
Purchase order (PO) financing is a short-term funding solution that provides capital to pay your suppliers so you can fulfill a large customer order you might not otherwise be able to complete. The lender pays your supplier directly — or provides you the funds — so the goods can be produced and delivered. You repay the financing company once your customer pays you for the completed order.
PO financing is designed specifically for businesses that have confirmed purchase orders from creditworthy buyers but lack the working capital to fulfill them. It solves the problem of having more demand than you can finance out of pocket.
The process typically unfolds as follows:
PO financing is not a loan in the traditional sense — it's an advance against a specific transaction. You're not borrowing against your general revenue; you're unlocking the value of a confirmed order.
Key Insight: According to the SBA, cash flow shortfalls are one of the top reasons small businesses cannot scale, even when they have strong demand from customers. PO financing is built to solve exactly this problem.
Invoice factoring is a financing arrangement where you sell your outstanding invoices (accounts receivable) to a factoring company at a discount in exchange for immediate cash. Instead of waiting 30, 60, or 90 days for customers to pay, you receive a large percentage of the invoice value upfront — typically 70% to 95% — and the remainder (minus fees) when your customer pays the factor.
Unlike PO financing, invoice factoring works after you've already delivered goods or services and issued an invoice. You've done the work; you're just waiting to get paid. Factoring lets you access that cash now rather than later.
Factoring companies include both recourse factoring (you're responsible if the customer doesn't pay) and non-recourse factoring (the factor absorbs the credit risk). Non-recourse factoring typically costs more but protects your business if a customer defaults.
Did You Know: Forbes reports that invoice factoring has grown significantly as an alternative financing tool, especially for B2B companies that regularly deal with slow-paying commercial clients or government contracts.
These two financing tools are often confused because they both involve business transactions and receivables, but they address completely different stages of the business cycle. The table below clarifies the most important distinctions:
| Feature | Purchase Order Financing | Invoice Factoring |
|---|---|---|
| Stage in cycle | Before fulfillment (pre-shipment) | After delivery (post-shipment) |
| What's used as collateral | Confirmed purchase order from buyer | Existing invoice / accounts receivable |
| Who pays supplier | Lender pays supplier directly | You've already paid supplier |
| Advance rate | 70%-100% of supplier invoice | 70%-95% of invoice face value |
| Typical cost | 1.8%-6% per month | 1%-5% per month (factoring rate) |
| Who controls collections | You collect from your customer | Factor collects directly from customer |
| Customer relationship impact | Minimal — customer pays you | Factor contacts your customers directly |
| Best for | Scaling to fulfill large orders | Bridging payment gaps on completed work |
| Business types | Distributors, manufacturers, wholesalers | Staffing, trucking, B2B services, construction |
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Talk to a Specialist →Cost is one of the biggest differentiators between PO financing and invoice factoring. Both are typically more expensive than traditional bank loans, but the pricing structures differ significantly.
PO financing fees are generally structured as a percentage of the supplier invoice value or the purchase order amount, charged per week or per month the transaction is outstanding. Typical fees range from:
Because PO financing covers a longer window — from the time your supplier is paid until your customer pays you — costs can add up quickly if payment cycles are slow. A 60-day transaction at 3% per month means a 6% total fee.
Invoice factoring is typically priced as a discount rate applied to the face value of the invoice. Common structures include:
Factoring fees also depend heavily on your invoice volume. High-volume factoring relationships often unlock better rates. CNBC notes that businesses factoring $250,000+ per month commonly negotiate factoring rates below 2%.
By the Numbers
PO Financing vs Invoice Factoring at a Glance
70-100%
PO Financing advance rate (of supplier cost)
70-95%
Invoice factoring advance rate (of invoice value)
24-48hr
Typical time to receive funds via factoring
1-6%
Monthly fee range for both financing types
Eligibility requirements differ substantially between these two financing types, largely because lenders evaluate different risks.
PO financing lenders primarily evaluate the creditworthiness of your customer, not your business credit score. This makes it accessible to newer businesses or those with less-than-perfect credit. Requirements typically include:
Invoice factoring is available to a broader range of industries, including service businesses, staffing companies, trucking firms, and construction companies. Key requirements include:
Industry Note: Industries with the highest factoring usage include staffing agencies (which often wait 45-90 days for client payment), transportation and logistics, healthcare providers dealing with insurance reimbursements, and construction contractors. According to Reuters, global accounts receivable financing exceeded $3.5 trillion annually.
Choosing between these two options isn't just about eligibility — it's about which tool fits the specific cash flow problem you're trying to solve.
Can You Use Both? Yes — some businesses use PO financing to fund fulfillment and then invoice factoring to accelerate payment collection after delivery. They work in sequence, not opposition, and together they can provide comprehensive cash flow support across the entire order-to-cash cycle.
At Crestmont Capital, we understand that cash flow bottlenecks can choke even the most promising businesses. Whether you need funding before an order ships or after an invoice is issued, we have solutions designed for real-world business needs.
Our invoice financing solutions help businesses access capital tied up in unpaid invoices without the wait. Our purchase order financing program can help you fulfill large orders that would otherwise be out of reach. We also offer accounts receivable financing and invoice factoring for businesses that regularly deal with slow-paying clients.
Beyond receivables-based financing, we offer small business loans and business lines of credit for companies that need flexible, recurring access to capital rather than transaction-specific financing. If you're unsure which option fits best, our advisors help you navigate your options at no cost or obligation.
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Get Your Options →A wholesale clothing distributor receives a $400,000 purchase order from a national retailer but only has $80,000 in their bank account. They can't pay their overseas manufacturer without more capital. PO financing is the clear choice — the lender pays the supplier, the goods are produced and shipped, the retailer pays, and the distributor repays the lender plus fees. Invoice factoring wouldn't apply here because there's no completed invoice yet.
A staffing agency places 50 workers with a large corporation each week. The agency must pay its workers weekly but the client pays invoices on net-60 terms. Invoice factoring is ideal — the agency factors its weekly invoices for immediate cash to cover payroll without waiting two months for each payment. PO financing wouldn't apply because staffing is a service, not a product fulfillment.
A concrete subcontractor completes a commercial project worth $200,000 and issues an invoice. The general contractor pays on net-45 terms, but the subcontractor needs to pay material suppliers and workers now. Invoice factoring converts the outstanding invoice to immediate cash. PO financing is not applicable since the work is already done.
A consumer electronics manufacturer receives a $1 million order from a big-box retailer. They use PO financing to fund the production run, receive the goods, ship them, and issue an invoice. They then factor the invoice to get cash faster than waiting for the retailer's net-60 payment. Both tools work together in sequence to bridge the entire cycle.
An import business secures a purchase order from a US supermarket chain for specialty foods from overseas suppliers. PO financing pays the foreign supplier directly, the goods clear customs and are delivered, and the supermarket pays the invoice. Without PO financing, the business couldn't fund the initial shipment and would have to decline the order.
A trucking company delivers freight for major shippers that pay on net-30 terms. The company has dozens of outstanding invoices each week while fuel, maintenance, and driver pay come due immediately. Freight factoring (a form of invoice factoring) converts each load confirmation and invoice into same-day cash, keeping the fleet moving without cash crunches.
The core difference is timing. Purchase order financing is used before you fulfill an order — it pays your suppliers so you can produce and ship goods. Invoice factoring is used after you've already delivered goods or services — it converts outstanding invoices into immediate cash. PO financing solves a fulfillment problem; factoring solves a collection timing problem.
PO financing is technically not a traditional loan. It's a transaction-based advance where the lender pays your supplier on your behalf in exchange for repayment once your customer pays. You don't receive cash directly in most cases — the lender pays the supplier. It doesn't add debt to your balance sheet in the same way a term loan would, and approval is based primarily on your customer's creditworthiness, not yours.
It can — particularly if your factoring company is aggressive in their collections approach. When you factor an invoice, your customer receives a "notice of assignment" telling them to remit payment to the factor, not to you. Most established factors handle this professionally, but some businesses prefer confidential factoring arrangements where the customer never knows you've factored the invoice. If client relationships are sensitive, ask specifically about confidential or non-notification factoring options.
PO financing is most common in industries that involve physical goods and have large B2B or B2G orders: wholesale distribution, consumer goods manufacturing, food and beverage distribution, electronics, apparel, and importers/exporters. It works especially well when you have large orders from well-established retailers, e-commerce platforms, government agencies, or corporations — entities with strong credit but long payment cycles.
Invoice factoring is widely used in staffing agencies, transportation and freight companies, construction subcontractors, healthcare providers billing insurance companies, government contractors, manufacturing, and professional services firms. Any B2B or B2G business that regularly issues invoices and waits 30-90+ days for payment can benefit from factoring.
Yes — PO financing is largely based on the credit of your customer, not your own credit score. If your customer is a large, creditworthy company, PO lenders can often approve financing even if your business is relatively new or your personal credit isn't perfect. However, extremely poor credit or recent bankruptcies may still present challenges with some lenders. Similarly, invoice factoring focuses on customer creditworthiness, making both options more accessible than traditional loans for business owners with credit challenges.
Minimum order sizes vary by lender. Many PO financing companies prefer transactions of at least $50,000 to $100,000 because the administrative costs of smaller deals make them less profitable. However, some specialty lenders work with orders as small as $10,000-$25,000. The larger the order and the more established the buyer, the easier it is to get funded. For very small orders, an alternative like a business line of credit may be more cost-effective.
Once you're set up with a factoring company, the process is very fast — typically 24 to 48 hours after submitting an invoice for approval. The initial setup process (underwriting your business and your customers) takes longer — usually 3 to 7 business days. After that, factoring becomes an ongoing, near-instant cash flow tool. PO financing approvals typically take 3-10 business days depending on the complexity of the transaction and due diligence required.
With recourse factoring, if your customer doesn't pay the invoice, you are responsible for buying the invoice back from the factor. Your business bears the credit risk. With non-recourse factoring, the factor absorbs the loss if your customer fails to pay due to insolvency or credit-related reasons. Non-recourse factoring protects your business but costs more — typically 0.5% to 1% higher fees. Most factoring arrangements in the U.S. are recourse, though non-recourse options are available from specialty providers.
Invoice factoring is a form of accounts receivable financing, but they differ in structure. With factoring, you sell your invoices outright to the factor at a discount. With accounts receivable financing (also called invoice financing), you borrow against your invoices as collateral while retaining ownership. Your customers are never notified, and you collect payments yourself. PO financing is separate entirely — it doesn't involve existing invoices but rather confirmed purchase orders for future deliveries.
Invoice factoring is generally less expensive per month than purchase order financing, primarily because the risk profile is lower — the work is done and an invoice exists. PO financing carries more risk (the goods haven't been produced yet) and spans a longer period, driving up total costs. However, cost comparison isn't always relevant — PO financing solves a problem factoring can't, and vice versa. The right tool for your situation matters more than which one is theoretically cheaper.
No — factoring companies evaluate the creditworthiness of your customers, not just your invoices. They will only factor invoices from customers they consider creditworthy. If a customer has poor credit history, a history of disputes, or is a consumer (B2C) rather than a business or government entity, the factor may decline to advance against those invoices. This is one reason factoring works best for B2B and B2G transactions with established buyers.
This is one of the significant risks of PO financing. If your customer fails to pay or cancels the order after goods are produced and shipped, you are typically still responsible for repaying the PO financing company. This is why most PO lenders require confirmed, non-cancelable purchase orders and thoroughly vet the creditworthiness of your customer before approving funds. Some arrangements also include trade credit insurance to mitigate this risk. Always review the default provisions in your PO financing agreement carefully.
They are related but different. With invoice factoring, you sell your invoices outright to the factor and they take over collections. With invoice discounting (also called confidential invoice financing), you borrow against your invoices without selling them — you still own them and still collect payment from customers, who never know you're using financing. Invoice discounting is more confidential but requires you to have strong internal credit control processes. Factoring is more hands-off but involves more visibility of the financing arrangement.
Ask yourself two questions: (1) Do you need funding before you fulfill an order, or after? If before, explore PO financing. If after, explore invoice factoring. (2) Are you in a product-based business or a service business? PO financing is almost exclusively for product companies. Factoring works for both. If you're still unsure, speaking with a financing specialist who can evaluate your specific revenue cycle, customer profile, and business model is the best path forward.
The debate between purchase order financing vs invoice factoring comes down to a simple question: where is your cash flow bottleneck? If you have orders you can't afford to fulfill, PO financing is designed for you. If you've done the work but can't wait for customers to pay, invoice factoring solves that problem. Both are legitimate, widely used financing tools that can be transformative for growing businesses.
Many high-growth businesses use both in tandem — PO financing to fund fulfillment and factoring to accelerate collections — creating a complete cash flow management strategy. At Crestmont Capital, we offer both options and can help you build a financing structure that supports your business at every stage of the order-to-cash cycle.
Ready to stop letting cash flow slow your growth? Apply now or contact our team to discuss your options.
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Apply Now →Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for general educational purposes only and is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Funding terms, qualifications, and product availability may vary and are subject to change without notice. Crestmont Capital does not guarantee approval, rates, or specific outcomes. For personalized information about your business funding options, contact our team directly.