Revenue-Based Finance: An Emerging Option for UK Businesses

Charlotte Ellis
Head of Marketing · Aug 18, 2026 · 6 min read
Revenue-based financing (RBF) is a capital model where a lender advances a lump sum in exchange for the right to receive a fixed percentage of monthly revenue until a predetermined total repayment amount is reached. There is no fixed term: in a strong revenue month, you repay more; in a weaker month, you repay less. For UK businesses with variable but growing revenue, this alignment between repayments and cash flow is genuinely compelling. RBF has grown significantly in the UK market in the past three years.
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How RBF works in the UK
A typical UK RBF transaction works as follows: a lender advances £100,000 against your annual revenue of £500,000. The total repayment cap is £120,000 (a 1.2x multiple). You repay via a fixed percentage of daily or monthly card transactions or bank receipts - say 10% of daily receipts - until the £120,000 is repaid. At £50,000 monthly revenue, repayment takes approximately two months; at £30,000, closer to three months.
The effective APR depends on how quickly revenue materialises. A 1.2x repayment multiple repaid in six months is approximately 40% APR. The same multiple repaid over 18 months is approximately 13% APR. Understanding this dynamic is essential: RBF is cheaper when revenue is strong and more expensive when revenue is weak.
Which UK businesses benefit from RBF
RBF works best for businesses with: strong card transaction volumes (it is most common in e-commerce, SaaS, and subscription businesses where revenue is predictable and digital), growing revenues rather than declining or volatile ones, and a clear use of funds that generates near-term revenue return. The capital-light, high-growth profile of many UK SaaS and e-commerce businesses makes them natural candidates.
It is less suitable for businesses with long revenue cycles (where the repayment percentage drains cash before revenue arrives), thin margins (where a 10% revenue repayment materially reduces margin), or businesses in declining revenue situations. In these cases, a term loan or revolving credit is typically more appropriate.
"Revenue-based financing aligns repayments with actual cash flow - a genuinely different model that suits a specific profile of growing UK business."
- Charlotte Ellis, Head of Marketing
Comparing RBF with alternative financing
Compared to a bank term loan, RBF is generally faster (days vs weeks), has fewer qualification requirements, and requires no personal guarantee. But it is more expensive on an APR basis and has a different risk profile. For a UK business that needs capital quickly, cannot meet traditional loan criteria, and has strong card revenues, RBF can be the right tool even at a higher cost.
Compared to equity, RBF involves no dilution - the lender has no ownership interest. For UK founders who have not yet raised institutional equity but do not want to dilute at an early stage, RBF provides a non-dilutive growth capital option. This is one reason why it has become popular among bootstrapped UK SaaS and DTC e-commerce businesses.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What revenue level is required to access RBF in the UK?
Most UK RBF providers require a minimum of £10,000-£20,000 monthly revenue. The amount advanced is typically 3-6x monthly revenue.
Is revenue-based finance regulated in the UK?
RBF sits in a regulatory grey area. Some products are structured to fall outside FCA consumer credit regulation, which applies to most business lending arrangements. Always check the terms carefully and ensure you understand the total cost.
Can I repay revenue-based finance early?
Usually yes, paying the outstanding balance up to the repayment cap. Unlike some term loans, there are typically no early repayment penalties as the lender's return is capped at the agreed multiple regardless of term.
The bottom line
Revenue-based financing fills a specific gap in the UK business finance landscape: fast, non-dilutive capital for growing businesses with strong recurring or card-based revenues. It is not suitable for all businesses, but for those that fit the profile, it can accelerate growth in a way that neither equity nor traditional debt can replicate. Spark Finance works with RBF providers in the UK market alongside our broader lender panel.
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