Imagine flexbility that no one else offers. Unlike the others, you choose what works best for you; you sign no long-term contracts; you pay no fees when your account is inactive. You set up your contract to meet your cash flow needs, not ours. You can choose between using our most advanced technology or using the old-fashioned systems ­- we maintain both for you. Unlike the others, our objective is not to force you to conform to us, but to get you the cash you need in the quickest and most efficient manner.

We offer cash advance rates of up to 97% -- exceeding industry norms by 20%. The typical maximum in the factoring industry is 70-80%. We can offer these great rates because of our unique and flexible combination of bank and private financing.

Our same day funding policy gets cash out to you within 12-24 hours. You have the cash when you need it, which will help keep your business moving.

Please contact us today and our seasoned invoice factoring professionals will help you get the cash you need today.
 - Call us at 1-800-986-1859, or 
 
- Email us, or
 
- Complete the Online Invoice Factoring Request Form




More Factoring Account Receivables

What is Accounts Receivable Financing?

Accounts receivable financing is the selling of outstanding invoices or receivables at a discount to a finance or factoring company that assumes the risk on the receivables and provides quick cash to your business. The amount of value assigned to the account depends on the age of a receivable. A more current invoice will pay more. Any accounts receivable over 90 days typically are not financed.

 

Is Account Receivable Factoring for You?

As a small business owner, you know first hand the struggle of attaining capital to finance the growth of your business or meet cash flow shortages. When regular small business financing such as loans and credit are limited, some business owners will turn to accounts receivable financing. Is accounts receivable financing right for your business?

 

The cost of doing business with an account receivable company is the discount taken on the invoices submitted for funding.  Fees range from 1 to 3 percent, depending on volume, credit-worthiness of the customers sold and overall risk.  The discount taken is best compared to a merchant accepting a Visa or MasterCard transaction and receiving immediate payment, less a percentage or discount, before the actual cardholder has paid his or her monthly statement. 

 

Businesses choosing to maintain momentum, despite a lack of conventional financing options, find that an account receivable company not only offers cash but also a stable foundation on which to build. They look to a future of managed growth and profitable performance that will bridge the gap to qualifying for bank financing.  

An Account Receivable Company  provides one of the most flexible financing options and the only one that can continually grow with your company. You are not totally limited to pre-approved credit lines, and you do not have to go through a complicated and redundant application process as your business grows

 

Account receivables factoring is the selling of accounts receivable or invoices in order to secure immediate, working capital (cash). Factoring has been used by businesses around the world for more than four centuries to manage cash flow. Here is a little bit about how invoice factoring works.


If your business extends credit to customers on net terms, depending on how long the terms are for, you must wait a while before you can actually get paid. Until then, you are left with accounts receivable. Accounts receivable are simply future payments that you are entitled to collect for goods or services provided after a given amount of time.

A factor company purchases your receivables by giving you an advance payment up front. This advanced payment is usually 70 - 90% of the total value of the receivables. After charging a small fee (2% and up) the remaining balance is released upon full receipt of payment for all the receivables/invoices. This allows your business to be able to make those larger sales and still have the working capital to continue operations and further growth.
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