Invoice Factoring in Canada 2025

Updated March 2025 · 10 min read

Invoice factoring is a form of business financing where you sell your outstanding invoices to a third party (a factoring company) at a discount in exchange for immediate cash. Rather than waiting 30, 60, or 90 days for customers to pay, you receive most of the invoice value within 24–48 hours. This guide explains how invoice factoring works in Canada, what it costs, and which businesses benefit most.

Invoice factoring vs. invoice financing: In factoring, you sell your invoices outright and the factor collects payment from your customers. In invoice financing (also called AR financing), you borrow against your invoices but remain responsible for collection. Both are common in Canada.

How Invoice Factoring Works

  1. You complete work and issue an invoice to your customer (net 30, 60, or 90 days)
  2. You submit the invoice to your factoring company
  3. The factor advances you 70–90% of the invoice value, typically within 24–48 hours
  4. The factor takes over collection — your customer pays the factor directly
  5. Once the customer pays in full, the factor remits the remaining balance to you, minus their fee

For example: You factor a $50,000 invoice at an 80% advance rate with a 2.5% factoring fee. You receive $40,000 immediately. When your customer pays, the factor sends you the remaining $100 minus $1,250 (2.5% of $50,000) = $8,750. Your total received: $48,750. Your cost: $1,250 for cash flow acceleration.

Recourse vs. Non-Recourse Factoring

Recourse Factoring

The more common structure in Canada. If your customer doesn't pay (defaults or disputes the invoice), you must buy back the invoice from the factor. You bear the credit risk of your customer. Lower fees than non-recourse. Appropriate when you have strong, reliable customers with good payment histories.

Non-Recourse Factoring

The factor assumes the credit risk. If your customer goes bankrupt and doesn't pay, the factor absorbs the loss (not you). Higher fees to compensate for the additional risk. Appropriate for businesses with customers in volatile industries or when you want to fully transfer collection risk. Note: most non-recourse agreements only cover insolvency — if a customer simply refuses to pay due to a dispute, recourse may still apply.

Invoice Factoring Costs in Canada

Factoring fees in Canada are typically expressed as a percentage of the invoice face value per 30-day period. Common structures:

Additional costs may include setup fees, minimum volume commitments, monthly service fees, wire transfer fees, and credit check fees on new customers. Always ask for the full fee schedule and calculate the effective annual rate before signing a factoring agreement.

Advance Rates

The advance rate — the percentage of the invoice value you receive upfront — varies based on:

Typical advance rates in Canada: 70–80% for lower-rated customers, 80–90% for strong commercial customers, up to 95% for government invoices.

Who Benefits Most from Invoice Factoring

Invoice factoring is most valuable for:

Invoice Factoring vs. Bank Line of Credit

Top Invoice Factoring Companies in Canada

What to Look for in a Factoring Agreement

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