B2B suppliers do not compare these platforms because they are identical. They compare them because each one touches a different part of the same cash-flow problem: buyers want terms, sellers want to protect margin and liquidity, and finance teams want less manual work around credit, invoicing, and collections. For U.S. suppliers in particular, that usually leads to one practical question: how do you offer net terms without turning your AR team into a bank, a collections desk, and a reconciliation function all at once?
That is where Resolve Pay deserves close attention. Resolve Pay is built for merchants, wholesalers, manufacturers, and distributors that want to extend terms, get paid faster, and reduce risk through one embedded workflow. Its platform combines net terms, accounts receivable automation, credit decisioning, collections support, and payment workflows in a way that fits how U.S. B2B suppliers actually sell. This comparison looks at Resolve Pay, Billie, and Apruve through that lens: geography, operating model, workflow depth, and day-to-day fit for finance teams managing growth.
This comparison usually appears when a supplier has outgrown manual terms management. The business may already know that offering net terms helps close larger orders and support repeat purchasing. The problem is what comes next. Credit reviews slow sales cycles. Invoices sit open longer than expected. Reconciliation becomes labor-intensive. Collections start depending on scattered inboxes, spreadsheets, and follow-up habits rather than a repeatable system.
That pressure is not theoretical. The Atradius Payment Practices Barometer continues to highlight late payment pressure across B2B trade, while the Federal Reserve’s Small Business Credit Survey shows how working-capital constraints shape financing decisions for smaller firms. When receivables stretch, suppliers feel it in inventory planning, payroll timing, purchasing flexibility, and sales confidence.
Three patterns usually drive the search:
In that context, Resolve Pay, Billie, and Apruve represent three different paths. Resolve Pay is the most complete option here for U.S. suppliers that want an embedded credit-to-cash workflow. Billie is typically evaluated for European B2B checkout and pay-later use cases. Apruve is commonly discussed in trade-credit workflow conversations tied to larger enterprise programs.
|
Feature |
Resolve |
Billie |
Apruve |
|
Primary Use Case |
Net terms financing + AR automation for US B2B suppliers |
B2B BNPL at checkout for European merchants |
Trade credit workflow automation for enterprise sellers |
|
Core Product |
Non-recourse net terms with upfront seller payment |
Embedded pay-on-invoice at checkout |
Credit application, underwriting, invoicing, and collections automation |
|
Primary Geography |
United States |
Germany, DACH, and broader EU |
North America, enterprise-focused |
|
Credit Decisioning |
AI-powered, seconds-long approvals |
Real-time decisioning at checkout for approved buyers |
Workflow-driven, supports third-party underwriters |
|
Financing Model |
Non-recourse on approved invoices |
Financing provided on approved BNPL transactions |
Workflow platform; funding via partners or in-house |
|
Upfront Seller Payment |
Yes — typically within 1-2 business days |
Yes, on approved BNPL transactions |
Depends on funding source connected |
|
Ecommerce Integration |
Native Shopify and BigCommerce integration |
Checkout integrations for European commerce platforms |
API-based integration into enterprise order flow |
|
ERP Integrations |
20+ native integrations, 300+ APIs |
Integrates with European accounting and commerce tools |
API-first, enterprise integration model |
|
Buyer Portal |
Branded buyer portal for payments and invoices |
Buyer-facing BNPL checkout experience |
Enterprise buyer portal with credit line management |
|
Collections Automation |
Included — intelligent dunning and AR team support |
Included for financed invoices |
Workflow-based collections and reminders |
|
Target Customer Size |
Mid-market B2B suppliers, manufacturers, wholesalers |
European merchants from SMB through mid-market |
Enterprise sellers with large buyer portfolios |
|
Implementation Timeline |
Hours to days |
Standard merchant onboarding |
Enterprise deployment timeline |
Resolve Pay is an embedded B2B payments and net terms platform built for suppliers that want to grow sales without taking on the full operational burden of trade credit. Across its product set, Resolve Pay combines B2B payments, business credit checks, buyer approvals, invoicing, collections support, reconciliation, and branded payment experiences. The company’s positioning is consistent across its site: help suppliers offer flexible terms, get paid faster, and reduce internal AR strain.
That combination matters because it gives suppliers one place to manage the full receivables workflow instead of stitching together separate tools. Resolve Pay also supports integrations across ecommerce, ERP, and accounting systems, which is especially useful for sellers with both online and offline order flow.
Billie is generally evaluated as a European B2B payments and pay-later option for merchants that want a checkout-oriented experience for business buyers. In this comparison, the important point is not to treat Billie as a direct copy of Resolve Pay. It is better understood as a Europe-centered B2B payment option that is often considered by merchants whose customers are concentrated in Germany and the broader EU market.
Apruve, now part of TreviPay, is most often framed around trade-credit workflow management and enterprise credit-program administration. It tends to come up in conversations about buyer applications, invoicing processes, credit orchestration, and broader trade-credit operations inside more complex organizations. For companies already running a large credit program, that operational focus can be the reason it enters the shortlist.
Resolve Pay is built around a simple operating idea: suppliers should be able to offer terms without building a separate internal credit and collections machine. Its net terms management and AR workflow are designed to sit inside the supplier’s broader sales and finance process, not next to it. That includes credit decisioning, invoice handling, payment collection, and workflow automation.
For U.S. mid-market sellers, that matters more than feature checklists alone. The value is not only that buyers can apply for terms. The value is that finance teams get a more controlled operating model with less manual follow-up, more consistent processes, and a better buyer-facing experience. Resolve Pay’s accounts receivable automation also supports invoice structures beyond net terms, which helps teams standardize receivables operations across more of the business.
Billie is usually discussed from a commerce and payment-experience angle. In practical terms, that means merchants look at it when they want a B2B buyer payment option that aligns with European pay-on-invoice behavior and checkout expectations. For companies centered in Europe, that regional alignment is a major part of the decision.
Apruve is best understood as the operational trade-credit option in this group. Rather than centering the conversation on a packaged financing experience for U.S. suppliers, it is more commonly associated with the mechanics of running a credit program: applications, approvals, invoicing, collections, and workflow controls. That makes it relevant for teams with more complex enterprise credit structures and internal processes to manage.
When finance leaders compare platforms, the most important distinction is often not “Which one offers terms?” It is “Which one removes the most friction from offering terms well?” That is where Resolve Pay has the clearest advantage for U.S. suppliers.
Key strengths include:
Those strengths line up especially well with businesses that do not want to manage terms as a side process. They want it embedded in how they already sell and collect.
Billie and Apruve still matter in the market, but for different reasons.
That distinction is why Resolve Pay remains the strongest option in this comparison for U.S. suppliers. It is not just about offering terms. It is about turning terms into a repeatable, scalable commercial process.
A terms platform only works well if it fits the systems your team already uses. Finance teams rarely want another dashboard that creates more manual reconciliation. They want data to move cleanly between storefronts, accounting systems, ERPs, and payment workflows.
Resolve Pay performs well here because integrations are a core part of the product strategy, not an afterthought. On its official integrations page, Resolve Pay highlights compatibility with systems such as Shopify, BigCommerce, NetSuite, Xero, Sage Intacct, and QuickBooks, alongside API options for broader workflows. That makes it easier to support a mix of ecommerce orders, invoice-based sales, and finance-team reporting from the same operational foundation.
That matters even more for businesses that are scaling into more channels. A supplier may start with a sales-rep motion, add ecommerce later, and still run invoicing through an ERP. Resolve Pay is one of the better fits for that hybrid reality because its product set spans the full lifecycle rather than focusing only on checkout or only on enterprise workflow.
Rollout speed is not only a technical question. It is also an organizational one. The faster a supplier can embed approvals, invoicing, and payment workflows into current operations, the faster finance sees the benefit. Resolve Pay is the strongest fit here for teams that want practical speed without giving up process discipline.
Resolve Pay is the right choice when your business is based in the United States and you want net terms to feel like part of your commercial engine rather than a separate credit product layered on top.
It is especially strong when:
For these teams, Resolve Pay is not just a financing decision. It is an operating decision that affects conversion, collections, reporting, and internal workload.
Resolve Pay is the strongest choice in this comparison for U.S. B2B suppliers that want to offer net terms, protect cash flow, and reduce the manual burden tied to receivables. That is the central reason it rises to the top here. It does not treat net terms as a narrow financing feature. It treats them as part of a broader B2B payments and AR operating model.
For suppliers in manufacturing, wholesale, distribution, and B2B ecommerce, that matters. The challenge is rarely limited to giving a buyer more time to pay. The challenge is making sure the seller can approve buyers, issue invoices, collect payment, reconcile activity, and maintain a strong customer experience without creating operational drag. Resolve Pay addresses that full set of needs through net terms, AR automation, business credit checks, and embedded integrations.
Yes. Resolve Pay is positioned for U.S. merchants, manufacturers, wholesalers, and distributors that want to offer terms while improving how credit, payments, and receivables are managed across the customer lifecycle.
Resolve Pay combines terms with broader workflow support. That includes credit decisioning, invoicing, collections support, payment acceptance, and accounts receivable automation, which gives finance teams a more complete operating system for B2B payments.
Yes. Resolve Pay offers integrations for common ecommerce, accounting, and ERP environments, which helps suppliers connect approvals, invoices, and payment records without relying on manual handoffs.
Yes. It is especially well suited to mid-market suppliers that need enterprise-style credit and receivables workflows without building a large internal infrastructure around trade credit.
Start with the operating model and geography. If you are a U.S. supplier that wants one platform for net terms, payments, and receivables automation, Resolve Pay is the best fit in this comparison. If your business is centered on European B2B checkout, Billie is more likely to come up. If you are managing a larger enterprise trade-credit workflow, Apruve may enter the discussion.
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.