While Forward Financing has provided over $4 billion in financing to tens of thousands of businesses, B2B companies are increasingly discovering superior alternatives that offer transparent pricing, eliminate repayment risk, and actually enhance customer relationships. From Resolve's non-recourse invoice advances to traditional factoring and lines of credit, these seven options deliver working capital without the high costs and potential cash flow volatility of revenue-based financing.
Resolve stands out as the premier Forward Financing alternative by transforming B2B payments from a cash flow challenge into a competitive advantage. Instead of borrowing against future revenue at high costs, Resolve advances payment on your approved invoices while your customers pay on flexible net terms.
Key Features:
Comprehensive Platform Benefits:
Resolve isn't just financing—it's your complete B2B payment infrastructure. The platform's AI-powered AR automation eliminates manual collections work by automatically sending payment reminders, managing collections workflows, and reconciling payments across your accounting systems.
Unlike revenue-based financing that creates daily repayment obligations regardless of your sales performance, Resolve's model aligns with your natural B2B workflow: you invoice customers, Resolve advances you cash immediately, and your customers pay Resolve directly on their agreed terms. This eliminates the potential cash flow volatility that makes revenue-based financing problematic for B2B businesses with irregular sales patterns.
The platform's free business credit checks with most decisions delivered within 24 business hours. Resolve's experts—formerly of Amazon, PayPal, and Fortune 500 firms—deliver deeper credit insights than traditional bureaus, enabling you to confidently extend credit to more customers.
Transparent Pricing Structure:
Resolve highlights customer success stories including reported double-digit improvements in order volume from offering competitive net terms, while reducing days sales outstanding (DSO) from 45-60 days to effectively 1 day. According to its website, Resolve serves thousands of B2B companies across manufacturing, wholesale, distribution, and B2B ecommerce.
Resolve's ecommerce integrations enable seamless implementation across QuickBooks, Xero, NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Magento, Shopify, BigCommerce, and WooCommerce. The platform's checkout extensions allow B2B buyers to select "Net 30" or "Net 60" as a payment method during online checkout, just like credit cards—often improving conversion rates for B2B ecommerce companies.
Traditional invoice factoring remains a viable alternative for B2B businesses that need immediate cash but don't require the comprehensive features of embedded payment platforms. Factoring companies offer established services with predictable processes for converting invoices to immediate working capital.
Core Capabilities:
Cost and Risk Considerations:
While factoring fees of 1-5% may appear competitive, the recourse nature of traditional factoring creates significant hidden costs. According to industry comparisons, merchants remain liable for customer non-payment, requiring bad debt reserves and creating unpredictable cash flow exposure.
Additionally, traditional factoring companies contact your customers directly to collect payment, potentially damaging your customer relationships and professional reputation. The notification process makes it clear that you've sold your receivables, which can signal financial distress to your buyers.
Operational Limitations:
Traditional factoring lacks the automation and integration capabilities of modern platforms. Merchants typically must manually submit invoices for funding, manage reserve accounts, and handle collections for non-performing accounts. There's no AI-powered credit decisioning, automated AR workflows, or white-label customer experience.
For businesses that only need occasional invoice advances and can manage the operational overhead, traditional factoring provides a straightforward solution. However, for companies seeking to offer competitive net terms while eliminating AR workload and credit risk, Resolve's modern alternative provides superior outcomes with transparent pricing and complete automation.
Revolving lines of credit from providers like Fundbox offer flexible working capital that can be drawn and repaid as needed, similar to a business credit card but typically with lower interest rates and higher limits.
Platform Features:
Cost Structure Analysis:
Lines of credit typically carry interest rates of 15-100%+ APR, depending on creditworthiness and risk profile. While this may be lower than Forward Financing's factor rates, it's still significantly higher than Resolve's risk-based fees when measured against the specific use case of B2B invoice financing.
The fundamental limitation of lines of credit is that they don't address the root cause of B2B cash flow problems: slow customer payments. Instead of getting paid faster on your existing invoices, you're borrowing against future revenue to cover the gap—creating debt service obligations while your DSO remains unchanged.
Strategic Considerations:
Lines of credit work best for businesses with unpredictable working capital needs that aren't tied to specific customer invoices. For inventory purchases, equipment upgrades, or seasonal staffing, a revolving line provides flexible access to capital. However, for B2B companies primarily struggling with slow-paying customers, invoice-specific financing like Resolve's platform provides more targeted and cost-effective relief.
The lack of net terms capability also means lines of credit don't help you compete for B2B customers who expect flexible payment terms. In today's competitive B2B marketplace, the ability to offer Net 30, 60, or 90 terms can be the difference between winning and losing large orders.
Traditional term loans from banks and alternative lenders provide lump-sum working capital with fixed repayment schedules, typically ranging from 6 months to 5 years.
Loan Characteristics:
Operational Implications:
Term loans create predictable debt service obligations but don't address B2B-specific cash flow challenges. Unlike invoice financing that scales with your sales volume, term loans require fixed monthly payments regardless of your current revenue performance. This can create significant strain during seasonal slowdowns or unexpected business disruptions.
The approval process for term loans is also considerably slower than modern B2B payment platforms. While Resolve provides credit decisions within 24 business hours, bank term loans typically require 2-6 weeks of documentation, financial statements, and underwriting review.
Strategic Fit Assessment:
Term loans make sense for major capital expenditures like equipment purchases, facility expansions, or acquisitions where you need substantial upfront capital with predictable repayment terms. However, for ongoing working capital needs tied to customer payment cycles, the debt burden and inflexibility of term loans make them less suitable than invoice-specific financing solutions.
The inability to offer net terms to customers is another significant limitation. Term loans provide capital but don't enhance your competitive position in the B2B marketplace, where payment flexibility is increasingly expected by buyers.
Merchant cash advances (MCAs) provide immediate working capital in exchange for a percentage of future credit card sales, with repayments automatically deducted daily or weekly from your merchant account.
MCA Structure:
Cost Reality Check:
Forward Financing's factor rates of 1.3-1.5x translate to estimated effective APRs of 60-150%+, making MCAs “often among the higher-cost working capital options available. A $50,000 advance with a 1.4x factor rate requires $70,000 in total repayment—$20,000 in financing costs for approximately 4-6 months of capital access.
While the flexible repayment structure helps during slow periods (lower sales = lower daily payments), you still owe the full factor amount regardless of how long it takes to repay. This creates a significant financial burden that can trap businesses in cycles of repeat borrowing.
B2B Limitations:
MCAs are fundamentally designed for businesses with high credit card transaction volumes—restaurants, retail stores, and service businesses. B2B companies that primarily invoice customers and receive ACH or check payments may not qualify for MCA programs or may face higher factor rates due to lower card processing volumes.
Like other general working capital solutions, MCAs don't address B2B-specific challenges like slow customer payments or the need to offer competitive net terms. They provide capital but don't enhance your ability to win B2B customers or streamline your accounts receivable processes.
Business credit cards offer revolving credit lines with various rewards programs, cash back incentives, and purchase protections, serving as a flexible financing tool for smaller working capital needs.
Card Features:
Strategic Limitations:
While business credit cards work well for routine expenses and small purchases, they're not designed for the substantial working capital needs of growing B2B businesses. Credit limits rarely exceed $100,000, and cash advances typically carry fees of 3-5% plus higher interest rates.
The personal liability aspect is particularly problematic for business owners seeking to separate personal and business finances. Most small business credit cards require personal guarantees, putting personal assets at risk for business expenses.
B2B Payment Gap:
Business credit cards don't solve the fundamental B2B payment challenge: your customers expect net terms, but you need immediate cash flow. While you might use a credit card to cover the gap temporarily, this creates high-interest debt without addressing the underlying issue or enhancing your competitive position with customers.
For B2B companies looking to offer net terms while getting paid immediately, specialized platforms like Resolve provide purpose-built solutions that credit cards simply cannot match.
Revenue-based financing (RBF), Forward Financing's core product, provides lump-sum working capital repaid as a percentage of daily or weekly revenue until a predetermined factor amount is reached.
RBF Mechanics:
Cost and Cash Flow Impact:
Revenue-based financing creates significant cash flow pressure through daily or weekly revenue deductions that continue regardless of business performance. During slow periods, these automatic withdrawals can strain operations and limit growth opportunities.
The effective cost is substantially higher than invoice-specific financing. For a $50,000 advance with a 1.4x factor rate ($70,000 total repayment), the financing cost is $20,000 over an estimated 4-6 months—equivalent to approximately 80-120% APR. Compare this to Resolve's risk-based fees for the same working capital effect when advancing a $50,000 invoice.
Strategic Considerations for B2B:
Revenue-based financing treats all revenue equally, regardless of source or payment terms. For B2B companies with net terms customers, this means repaying financing costs from cash flow while waiting 30-90 days to collect on invoices. This creates a double burden: you're paying for capital while simultaneously extending interest-free credit to your customers.
The model also doesn't enhance your competitive position in the B2B marketplace. While you gain working capital, you can't offer the net terms that your competitors with embedded payment platforms can provide, potentially losing large orders to more flexible suppliers.
For B2B companies evaluating Forward Financing alternatives, the choice depends on your specific business model, customer base, and strategic objectives:
By Business Model:
Estimated Cost Comparison for $50,000 Working Capital Need:
Implementation Timeline:
The key insight is that not all working capital solutions are created equal for B2B businesses. While Forward Financing and similar products provide general capital, they don't address the specific challenges of B2B commerce: slow customer payments, the need to offer competitive net terms, and AR workload management.
Resolve's platform is purpose-built for B2B companies that invoice customers, providing not just financing but a complete payment infrastructure that enhances customer relationships while protecting cash flow. By advancing payment on your invoices while your customers pay on flexible terms, Resolve can help turn AR into a competitive advantage.
For companies seeking to implement modern B2B payment solutions, Resolve's net terms platform provides comprehensive support through dedicated account management, technical integration assistance, and ongoing optimization guidance.
The fundamental difference is in the financing structure and risk allocation. Forward Financing provides revenue-based financing where you receive a lump sum and repay through daily/weekly revenue deductions until a factor amount (1.3-1.5x) is reached. Invoice factoring involves selling specific invoices at a discount (1-5%) to receive immediate cash, with repayment coming from customer payments on those invoices. Forward Financing creates ongoing repayment obligations regardless of customer payment timing, while factoring ties financing directly to specific receivables.
B2B payment platforms like Resolve provide invoice-specific financing with risk-based pricing, while merchant cash advances charge factor rates of 1.3-1.5x equivalent to estimated 60-150%+ APR. Embedded platforms advance payment on your approved invoices while customers pay on net terms, eliminating repayment burden. Merchant cash advances create daily revenue deductions that continue regardless of business performance, potentially straining cash flow during slow periods. Additionally, embedded platforms offer net terms capabilities that enhance customer relationships, while MCAs provide only general working capital.
Non-recourse financing means the merchant bears zero risk if customers don't pay—the financing provider assumes all credit risk for approved advances. This eliminates bad debt exposure and provides cash flow certainty, allowing businesses to confidently extend credit to more customers without fear of financial loss. Recourse financing (traditional factoring) requires merchants to repay advances if customers default, creating unpredictable liabilities and requiring bad debt reserves that tie up additional capital.
Access speed varies by solution type. Resolve provides Payment as fast as 1 day after invoice approval for existing customers, with new customer credit decisions in under 24 hours. Traditional factoring and lines of credit typically fund within 1-3 days. Term loans require 2-6 weeks for approval and funding. Forward Financing and merchant cash advances can provide same-day funding but at significantly higher costs. The fastest implementations come from platforms with pre-built ERP integrations like Resolve's connections to QuickBooks, NetSuite, and major ecommerce platforms.
Modern B2B platforms like Resolve offer seamless integration with leading ERP and ecommerce systems including QuickBooks, NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Shopify, BigCommerce, and Magento. These bi-directional integrations automatically sync customer data, create invoices, and reconcile payments—eliminating manual data entry. Traditional financing options like Forward Financing typically don't integrate with accounting systems, requiring manual reconciliation and separate payment tracking. The integration capability of modern platforms significantly reduces operational overhead while improving data accuracy and financial reporting.
This post is to be used for informational purposes only and does not constitute formal legal, business, or tax advice. Each person should consult his or her own attorney, business advisor, or tax advisor with respect to matters referenced in this post. Resolve assumes no liability for actions taken in reliance upon the information contained herein.