Business Funding Glossary

All funding and finance terms explained in plain English

APR (Annual Percentage Rate)

The yearly cost of borrowing money, expressed as a percentage. Includes interest rate plus fees. Example: £10,000 loan at 10% APR means you'll pay roughly £1,000 in interest over one year.

Related:Interest RateFactor Rate

Asset Finance

Funding used to purchase specific business assets like vehicles, machinery, or equipment. The asset itself serves as collateral. Typical rates: 8-15% APR.

Related:Hire PurchaseEquipment Leasing

Bridging Finance

Short-term funding (usually 1-24 months) to "bridge" a temporary cash flow gap until longer-term finance or revenue arrives. Common use: awaiting property sale or large invoice payment.

Related:Working CapitalShort-Term Loan

CCJ (County Court Judgment)

A court order made against you if you don't pay money you owe. Stays on credit file for 6 years. Having CCJs makes traditional lending harder but alternative lenders (MCAs) may still approve.

Related:Bad CreditDefault

Collateral

Assets you pledge as security for a loan. If you don't repay, the lender can seize the collateral. Examples: property, vehicles, equipment. MCAs typically don't require collateral.

Related:Secured LoanPersonal Guarantee

Credit Score

A number (300-850) representing your creditworthiness based on past borrowing behavior. 680+ is good for business lending. Below 600 is poor. MCAs are less dependent on credit scores than traditional loans.

Related:ExperianEquifax

Daily Withholding

The automatic deduction from your card sales each day to repay an MCA. Example: 15% withholding means if you take £1,000 in cards, £150 goes to MCA repayment, you receive £850.

Related:Holdback PercentageRevenue Share

Early Termination Fee (ETF)

A penalty charged if you cancel a contract before the end date. Common with card machine contracts. Can be £500-£2,000+ depending on contract length remaining.

Related:Break FeeNotice Period

Factor Rate

Used in MCAs instead of APR. A multiplier (typically 1.1-1.6) that determines total repayment. Example: £20,000 advance × 1.35 factor = £27,000 total repayment (£7,000 cost).

Related:MCAMerchant Cash Advance

FCA (Financial Conduct Authority)

UK financial services regulator. Lenders and brokers dealing with consumer credit must be FCA authorized. Check FCA register at fca.org.uk before dealing with any lender.

Related:RegulationAuthorization

Holdback Percentage

The percentage of card sales withheld for MCA repayment. Typically 10-20%. Example: 15% holdback on £50,000 monthly card sales = £7,500/month to MCA.

Related:Daily WithholdingRevenue Share

Invoice Financing

Funding against outstanding customer invoices. Receive up to 90% of invoice value immediately, pay fee (1.5-3.5%/month), balance paid when customer pays. Also called factoring or invoice discounting.

Related:FactoringInvoice Discounting

Merchant Cash Advance (MCA)

Business funding repaid from a percentage of future card sales. Not technically a loan - you're selling future receivables. Fast approval (24 hours), based on card volume not credit score.

Related:Factor RateHoldback Percentage

MMSC (Minimum Monthly Service Charge)

The minimum fee you'll pay monthly for card processing, even if transaction fees don't reach this amount. Example: £25 MMSC means you pay minimum £25/month regardless of volume.

Related:Card Processing Fees

Personal Guarantee

A promise that you'll personally repay a business debt if the company can't. Puts your personal assets (home, savings) at risk. Most MCAs don't require personal guarantees.

Related:CollateralLimited Liability

Revenue-Based Financing (RBF)

Similar to MCA but based on total revenue (not just cards). You repay a percentage (3-8%) of monthly revenue until reaching a cap (typically 1.2-1.5× borrowed amount).

Related:Revenue ShareMCA

Revenue Share

The percentage of revenue you pay monthly (RBF) or daily (MCA) to repay funding. Adjusts automatically with business performance - high revenue month = pay more, low month = pay less.

Related:HoldbackRevenue-Based Financing

Secured Loan

A loan backed by collateral (assets). If you default, lender seizes the asset. Lower rates than unsecured loans because lender has security. Example: vehicle finance secured by the vehicle.

Related:CollateralAsset Finance

Start Up Loans

UK government scheme offering £500-£25,000 to new businesses at 6% APR. Includes 12 months free mentoring. Available to businesses under 24 months old. Apply at startuploans.co.uk.

Related:Government FundingStartup Finance

Unsecured Loan

A loan not backed by collateral. Lender relies on your creditworthiness and business performance. Higher rates than secured loans (10-25% APR typical) but no assets at risk.

Related:Personal LoanBusiness Loan

Working Capital

Money available for day-to-day operations. Calculated as: Current Assets - Current Liabilities. Healthy businesses maintain 3-6 months expenses in working capital.

Related:Cash FlowOperating Capital

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