What happens when your customer doesn’t pay? This question divides AR financing into two fundamentally different products. With recourse factoring, you absorb the loss. With non-recourse, the financing company does. Understanding recourse vs non-recourse factoring determines whether you’re buying protection or just accessing capital.
The distinction affects pricing, risk, and which option fits your business. Here’s exactly how each works—and when each makes sense.
Recourse Factoring: Lower Fees, More Risk
With recourse invoice factoring, you receive an advance on your invoices but remain ultimately responsible if customers don’t pay. If a customer defaults, you must buy back the invoice—repaying the advance plus any accrued fees. The factoring company has “recourse” against you.
Because the financing company carries less risk, recourse factoring typically costs less—often 0.5-1% lower than non-recourse alternatives. For businesses with reliable customers and low default history, this savings adds up significantly.
Non-Recourse Factoring: Higher Fees, Less Risk
Non-recourse factoring transfers bad debt risk to the financing company. If your customer can’t pay due to insolvency or bankruptcy, you keep the advance. The factor absorbs the loss. You’ve essentially purchased credit insurance bundled with financing.
However, “non-recourse” has important limits. Most agreements still hold you responsible if customers don’t pay due to disputes, quality issues, or simple refusal. Non-recourse typically only covers customer insolvency—a narrower protection than many assume.
| Factor | Recourse Factoring | Non-Recourse Factoring |
|---|---|---|
| Bad Debt Risk | You bear the risk | Factor bears insolvency risk |
| Typical Fee Range | 1-3% | 2-5% |
| Customer Requirements | More flexible | Stricter credit standards |
| Dispute Protection | Your responsibility | Usually your responsibility |
| Best For | Strong customer relationships | New customers, less stable industries |
Reading the Fine Print
Non-recourse protection varies dramatically between providers. Some cover only verified customer bankruptcy. Others include broader insolvency protections. Few cover payment disputes or quality-related non-payment. The FTC recommends reviewing specific contract language rather than relying on labels.
Ask potential factors exactly what triggers non-recourse protection. Get specific scenarios in writing. Understanding what’s actually covered prevents expensive surprises.
When Each Option Makes Sense
Choose recourse factoring when you have long-standing customers with reliable payment histories, want the lowest possible fees, are confident in your customers’ financial stability, or primarily need fast capital access versus credit protection.
Choose non-recourse factoring when working with new customers whose creditworthiness is uncertain, operating in volatile industries with higher default rates, wanting to transfer credit risk as part of your risk management strategy, or when customer concentration means one default would significantly hurt.
The SBA emphasizes that neither option is universally superior—the right choice depends on your specific risk profile and customer base.
Key Takeaways
Recourse vs non-recourse factoring determines who absorbs customer non-payment. Recourse arrangements cost less but leave you liable for defaults. Non-recourse transfers insolvency risk to the factor but costs more and often includes important limitations. Evaluate your customer relationships, risk tolerance, and specific contract terms before deciding—the right structure protects your business without overpaying for coverage you don’t need.
Find the Right Factoring Structure
We offer both recourse and non-recourse options. Let’s determine which protects your business best.