The Rise in SME Loan Stacking: When Invoice Finance or Consolidation Loans Can Bring Clarity

The Rise in SME Loan Stacking: When Invoice Finance or Consolidation Loans Can Bring Clarity

“Loan stacking” is becoming a common pattern in UK SMEs. A business takes one facility to cover a short gap. Then adds another to keep momentum.

Before long, there are multiple repayments leaving the account on different days, each with its own rules and renewal dates.

The business can still be profitable. But cashflow becomes unpredictable, and lender appetite often narrows when the picture looks layered.

This article explains what stacking is, why it’s happening more often, and the practical routes businesses use to simplify things.

In particular, we’ll compare invoice finance and consolidation loans – two options that can reduce complexity and better match funding to how your business actually trades.

Key note: We do not publish definitive rates. Availability and terms depend on lender criteria, credit profile, documentation, and (where relevant) asset/invoice quality.

What is SME “loan stacking”?

Loan stacking is when a business takes out multiple facilities close together, usually to fill funding gaps as they appear. It can include several short-term loans, overlapping cashflow products, or a mix of fixed and variable repayment structures.

A simple definition is “multiple short-term loans in quick succession.”

Stacking vs structured funding (they’re not the same)

Not every “mix” is a problem. A planned setup can work well when products have clear roles (for example, one facility for working capital and another for an asset purchase).

Stacking is different. It’s typically reactive, fast, and built without a clear plan to exit or simplify.

Why SME stacking is rising

There isn’t one single cause. Most cases come from a combination of cashflow pressure, late payments, and the speed of modern borrowing.

Late payments keep squeezing working capital

When invoices don’t land on time, businesses often bridge the gap with whatever funding is quickest. Recent UK research highlights how widespread late payment chasing has become for small firms.

Fast funding can lead to fast layering

Quick decisions can be useful. The downside is that a second facility can be added before the business has seen the full cash impact of the first. That’s how “one quick fix” becomes three.

Lender interpretations change as layering grows

Even when a business is trading well, stacked repayments can look like stress in bank statements. Some lenders become cautious when they see multiple recent commitments, frequent credit searches, or inconsistent borrowing purposes.

The hidden cost of stacking isn’t just money – it’s complexity

Stacking tends to create operational drag:

  • Repayments become noisy (multiple deductions, multiple dates, different terms).

  • Forecasting gets harder (cash in looks fine, cash available doesn’t).

  • Options narrow (some lenders prefer a cleaner, simpler structure).

  • Time gets consumed (renewals, statements, lender questions, reconciliation).

If you can’t explain your funding stack in two sentences, it’s usually time to simplify it.

Common warning signs your funding is becoming “stacked”

Bank statement signals

  • Multiple repayments leaving the account each day, week and month

  • New facilities taken in the last 3–6 months

  • Borrowing that coincides with tax dates or payroll cycles

  • Cash dips that recover only after a new drawdown

Business signals

  • Sales are stable or growing, but cash is always tight

  • Debtor days are creeping up

  • Supplier terms are tightening

  • You’re spending more time “managing funding” than managing growth

Two routes SMEs often use to simplify: invoice finance or consolidation loans

Stacking usually happens because cashflow is being forced to do too much. The fix is often structural, not “another facility”.

Below are two commonly used clean-up routes, depending on what’s driving the cash gap.

Option 1: Invoice finance (best when invoices drive the gap)

If you invoice other businesses, invoice finance can be a practical alternative to stacking because it is built around receivables. In simple terms, it can release cash tied up in unpaid invoices so you aren’t waiting 30, 60, or 90 days to get paid.

The British Business Bank describes how invoice discounting and factoring work, including that invoice discounting is typically “finance-only”, while factoring can include collections support.

When invoice finance can be a strong fit

  • Regular B2B invoicing

  • Clear proof of delivery / acceptance

  • A ledger that is reasonably clean (low disputes and credits)

  • You want funding that can scale with sales (subject to lender criteria)

Factoring vs invoice discounting

  • Factoring: can include credit control support and collections.

  • Invoice discounting: you keep control of the ledger and collections.

Explore the options here >>> Invoice finance

With invoice-led funding, the “quality” of your invoices matters. Clean paperwork can speed up underwriting.

Option 2: Consolidation loans (best when simplicity is the goal)

A consolidation-style business loan is typically used to replace multiple commitments with one clearer facility. The aim is to reduce the number of repayments, create a predictable schedule, and make cashflow easier to manage month to month.

This route is often considered when:

  • You have several overlapping loans or cashflow products

  • You want one monthly repayment rather than multiple deductions

  • The business is viable, but repayments are fragmented

  • You can demonstrate affordability with statements and accounts

Start here:

When consolidation may not be the best first move

If late payment is the real issue, consolidating can tidy the surface but leave the core problem in place. In those cases, an invoice-led facility (or a revolving structure) may be a better match.

Invoice finance vs consolidation loans: which tends to fit when?

SituationInvoice finance tends to fitConsolidation loan tends to fit
You invoice other businesses✅ OftenSometimes
Late payment is the main driver✅ OftenSometimes
You need a simpler single repaymentSometimes✅ Often
You want funding to scale with sales✅ OftenRarely
Multiple overlapping facilities exist✅ Can replace some✅ Can replace many
You want to keep credit control in-houseInvoice discountingEither

The best fit depends on lender criteria, documentation, and (where relevant) invoice/ledger quality.

Other ways to reduce stacking risk

Revolving credit facility

If your cash need rises and falls, a revolving structure can be cleaner than taking repeated fixed-term products.

Explore: Revolving credit facility

Asset finance and refinance

If borrowing is linked to equipment or vehicles, matching repayments to asset life can protect working capital.

Explore: Asset finance and Asset refinance

Vehicles: Vehicle finance, car finance, van finance

How it works with The Funding Store (5 steps)

  1. Share your current funding picture
    What facilities you have, what goes out each month, and what the funding is meant to achieve.

  2. We identify the cleanest path
    Invoice-led, consolidation-led, revolving, or asset-led—based on how you trade.

  3. We build a lender-ready pack
    Statements, accounts, management figures, and (where relevant) debtor reports and sample invoices.

  4. We scan our lender panel and present clear options
    Including trade-offs: term, flexibility, security, and document requirements.

  5. Underwriting and payout (where available)
    Timescales depend on lender criteria, product choice, and document completeness.

Share your goal, timeline and key figures. We’ll scan our lender panel, present clear choices, and keep everything moving to payout.

FAQs: SME stacking, invoice finance and consolidation loans

  1. What is “loan stacking” for an SME?
    It usually means taking multiple facilities close together, creating overlapping repayments and added cashflow pressure.

  2. Is stacking always bad?Not always. A planned mix can work. It becomes an issue when it’s reactive and the repayments start to control cashflow.

  3. Why do businesses end up stacking?
    Often because cashflow gaps recur (late payments, seasonal dips, cost spikes) and the fastest product gets chosen repeatedly.

  4. Can invoice finance replace multiple short-term facilities?
    It can in many cases where invoices are the driver, subject to lender criteria and ledger quality.

  5. What’s the difference between factoring and invoice discounting?Invoice discounting is typically finance-only, while factoring can include collections support (depending on provider).

  6. Will my customers know I use invoice finance?
    Some facilities are confidential, others are disclosed. It depends on the product type and provider setup.

  7. What documents are needed for invoice finance?
    Commonly: debtor lists, sample invoices, terms, and proof of delivery, plus bank statements and accounts.

  8. What is a consolidation business loan?
    A facility designed to replace multiple repayments with one clearer structure, subject to affordability and lender criteria.

  9. Is consolidation always the quickest fix?
    It can simplify repayments quickly, but if late payment is the core issue, invoice-led funding may be the better structural match.

  10. What’s the first step to get out of stacking?
    Map every facility, repayment schedule, and purpose. Then choose one route that reduces complexity rather than adding another layer.

  11. Can I explore options if one lender declines?
    Yes. Different lenders have different criteria and product focus. A broad panel can improve matching.

  12. Do you publish rates?
    No. We do not publish definitive rates. Availability and terms depend on lender criteria, credit profile, documentation, and (where relevant) asset/invoice quality.

We do not publish definitive rates. Availability and terms depend on lender criteria, credit profile, documentation, and (where relevant) asset/invoice quality.

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This article has been produced by www.TheFundingStore.co.uk for general interest. No responsibility for loss occasioned to any person acting or refraining from action as a result of the information contained in this article is accepted by The Funding Store Ltd. In all cases appropriate professional legal and financial advice should be sought before making a decision.

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