Accounts Receivable Financing and Accounts Receivable Factoring are two terms that are interchangeably used, but there is a major difference between them. Although both refer to the concept of extending cash to an owner of a business in lieu of invoices and other Accounts Receivable, there are differences, no matter how subtle.
First of all, Accounts Receivable Financing is a loan in which the invoices are used as collateral. But this not the case with Accounts Receivable Factoring. Accounts Receivable Factoring is not a loan. It involves the selling of the invoices to the financing company at a rate less than the face value of the invoices. The financing companies then collect the money at the full face value from the clients. This means the business no longer has the responsibility of collecting the money.
But this is not the case in Accounts Receivable Financing. The process of Financing involves the extension of an advance on the percentage of each invoice