A conversation about financing can sound simple until you get into the details: fees, early repayment, rules for delays, and collateral clauses. This guide helps you go through that meeting calmly and concretely - you get ready questions that help structure the offer, and a glossary of terms that most often appear in documents.
Fees for managing the financing, servicing the agreement, or monitoring. They may be one time or recurring. Ask for their total amount over the entire agreement period.
Annual Percentage Rate - an indicator designed to help compare cost. In practice, it can be calculated differently depending on product structure. The safest way to compare is total cost in currency and the repayment schedule.
A one time fee for starting the process and setting up the financing. Check whether it is refundable and when it is charged.
Transfer of the right to payment from your customer to the financing provider. Most common in products based on invoices and receivables. Key question: who informs the customer, when, and how settlements are handled.
A mechanism that reduces risk for the financing provider. Key points are the form of collateral, proportionality to the amount, and clear enforcement conditions.
A fee for granting financing. It may be charged upfront or included in instalments. Key question: is it linked to the financing term, or is it calculated upfront from the amount regardless of the repayment period.
Costs charged for late repayment. What matters are time thresholds, automatic escalation, and the total cost in a 14-30 day delay scenario.
A list of requirements that must be met before funds are paid out: documents, signatures, collateral, sometimes additional approvals. This is a good place to verify whether “speed” is realistic.
The option to close the financing early. Good financing should have clear early repayment rules and a predictable cost, without “fees for success”.
An additional cost charged when you repay before the end of the term. If it exists, ask for specifics: how much it is and in which situations it is charged.
A cost that may appear with an amendment, a change of instalment date, a schedule change, or other modifications. It should be clearly described, because it can materially increase total cost in a “worse month” scenario.
The period for which funds are provided and during which you repay the obligation. Key question: is the cost calculated proportionally to time, or are some fees charged regardless of the term length.
A period during which you repay only interest or you do not repay principal immediately. It can make sense when the financing supports a project that will generate cash inflows later. Check whether the grace period increases the total cost disproportionately.
A form of security where a third party is liable if your business does not repay. Clarify when and how the guarantee can be enforced.
The amount due on a given date. Depending on the structure, it may include principal, interest, and fees.
The cost of capital expressed as a percentage. It matters, but it does not show the full price if the offer includes commissions and additional fees.
A document that sets the general cooperation rules and may cover future tranches or products. In practice, it structures the relationship - read it as carefully as the agreement for a specific financing.
The amount you receive. In agreements it may be described as the “financing amount” or the “principal amount”.
Part of the instalment repays principal, and part is the financing cost (interest). With early repayment, check whether interest cost is calculated proportionally to time.
A document used as security. What matters are the conditions for completing it, the amount, and the scenarios in which it may be used.
Fees for payment reminders and collection actions. They can add up quickly, so it is worth knowing the rates, the timing, and the thresholds that trigger the next steps.
A repayment plan: dates and amounts of instalments. The key is alignment with your cash flow and seasonality, not how “neat” it looks on paper.
A change of repayment terms if the situation changes. Good financing should include a real path to conversation and clear rules, not only automatic consequences.
The total amount you will repay over the full term: principal + interest + commissions + additional fees. This is the most important number for comparing offers.
In a meeting it is easy to get stuck in generalities, because the conversation naturally goes toward speed, availability, and “initial terms”. The questions below keep it where it should be from the start: numbers, the schedule, and how the agreement works in a bad scenario.
A good offer is one you can calculate and that can be described in writing - including the bad scenario. If after the meeting you do not have the total cost, a repayment schedule, and 14-30 day delay rules, you do not have an offer yet - you have a promise.