Revolving Credit Facility
A revolving credit facility gives your business access to a pre-approved pot of money that you can draw on, repay, and draw on again — without going back to the lender each time.
For businesses managing uneven cash flow, long customer payment terms, or the structural funding gaps that come with supplying large organisations, it is one of the most practical tools available. Yet many businesses do not know it exists, or assume it is only for large corporates.
It is not. Pinks works with a panel of lenders offering revolving credit facilities to UK SMEs from £10,000 upwards. This page explains how they work, what they cost, and where they are most useful — including how they combine with invoice discounting to create a genuinely complete working capital solution.
How a Revolving Credit Facility Works
An RCF operates like a pre-approved credit line. Once the facility is in place, you draw down what you need, repay it when funds allow, and access the facility again without reapplying. The limit is fixed; the balance moves up and down freely within it.
Interest is charged only on what is drawn. If your facility is £200,000 and you draw £50,000, you pay interest on £50,000. If you repay it the following week, interest stops. Some lenders charge a small non-utilisation fee on the undrawn portion — this is typically a fraction of the headline interest rate and compensates the lender for holding the capacity open.
The practical effect: you have a pool of capital available at short notice, at a known cost, that does not diminish unless you use it.
Facilities are set for a fixed term — typically one to three years. At the end of the term, the facility is reviewed and renewed (or renegotiated) rather than simply continuing indefinitely like an overdraft. This gives lenders certainty and gives borrowers a defined window in which to demonstrate how they use the facility.
Revolving Credit Facility vs Overdraft vs Term Loan
| Feature | Revolving Credit Facility | Business Overdraft | Term Loan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flexibility | Borrow, repay, borrow again freely | Limited to agreed overdraft ceiling | Fixed lump sum drawn once |
| Interest | On drawn balance only | On drawn balance; arrangement fees | On full balance from day one |
| Lender | Any specialist or bank lender | Your clearing bank only | Bank or specialist lender |
| Security for lender | Fixed term — cannot be withdrawn | Can be withdrawn at 24 hours' notice | Fixed term; early repayment charges apply |
| Typical limit | £10,000–£1m+ | Usually capped by bank's appetite | Determined by purpose and repayment capacity |
| Reapplication needed | No — facility revolves automatically | No — until bank reviews or withdraws | Yes — new application for each draw |
| Non-utilisation fee | Sometimes applies to unused portion | Arrangement fee typically flat | Not applicable |
| Best suited to | Seasonal gaps, working capital, Tier 1/2 supplier funding | Short-term daily cash management | Specific capital expenditure or acquisition |
Key point: A business overdraft can be withdrawn by your bank at 24 hours' notice — it has happened during credit tightenings and in periods of financial stress. A revolving credit facility from a specialist lender has a fixed term, meaning it cannot simply be pulled without cause. For businesses where working capital continuity is critical, this distinction matters.
Why This Matters If You Supply Tier 1 or Tier 2 Companies
The relationship between large buyers and their supply chains has changed significantly over the past decade. Payment terms that were once 30 days have extended — first to 60, then to 90, and in some sectors to 120 days or beyond. Large manufacturers, retailers, and public sector bodies have effectively transferred part of their working capital burden onto the businesses that supply them.
For a supplier, this creates a structural gap. You incur costs — materials, labour, energy — weeks or months before you receive payment. The larger your customer, and the longer their payment terms, the bigger that gap becomes. As your turnover grows, the gap grows with it.
The practical risk: a profitable business can run out of cash. Winning a major contract with a Tier 1 customer is excellent news commercially. If it strains the working capital position beyond what the business can absorb, the same contract can create a cash crisis.
An RCF addresses this directly. It does not replace the underlying trading relationship or shorten your customer's payment terms. What it does is allow you to bridge the gap between expenditure and receipt, keeping the business fully operational while the invoice clock runs.
For sub-tier suppliers — businesses supplying Tier 2 companies who themselves supply Tier 1 manufacturers — the cost of capital embedded in long payment terms is often the single largest commercial disadvantage they face relative to better-capitalised competitors. A well-structured RCF removes that disadvantage.
Combining a Revolving Credit Facility with Invoice Discounting
Invoice discounting and revolving credit facilities are frequently discussed as alternatives. For many businesses, they are more powerful as a combination.
Invoice discounting advances cash against the value of your outstanding sales invoices — typically 80 to 90 pence in the pound, with the balance (less fees) paid when your customer settles. It is highly effective where the cash gap is directly tied to unpaid invoices.
But not every cash gap comes from an unpaid invoice. Payroll is due regardless of whether invoices are paid. VAT falls quarterly. Stock must sometimes be purchased before an order is formally placed. Overheads do not stop when a contract ends and the next one has not started. These gaps are not covered by invoice discounting — because there is no invoice to advance against.
An RCF fills these gaps. The table below maps common cash flow challenges to which product addresses them.
| Cash flow challenge | Invoice discounting covers it? | RCF covers it? |
|---|---|---|
| Unpaid sales invoices | Yes — typically 80–90% of invoice value advanced | Indirectly — can bridge timing gaps |
| Payroll due before customer pays | Partially — if invoices are already raised | Yes — draw against facility immediately |
| Quarterly VAT bill | No — not invoice-backed | Yes — draw down, repay on receipt |
| Stock purchase ahead of order | No — no invoice exists yet | Yes — fund stock, repay when invoice paid |
| Overhead gap between contracts | No | Yes — smooth revenue troughs |
| Retentions held by Tier 1 | No — not raised as invoice | Yes — bridges until retention released |
| Emergency capital need | Slow — requires new invoice | Fast — available immediately within limit |
Together: invoice discounting unlocks cash from the ledger; the RCF covers everything the ledger cannot. For businesses with complex working capital needs, neither product alone achieves what both achieve together.
Pinks works with businesses to determine whether one or both facilities are appropriate, and structures lender approaches accordingly. The two facilities do not need to be with the same provider — and often the best terms are achieved by sourcing them separately.
What Lenders Look for When Assessing an RCF Application
Lenders approach revolving credit facilities as working capital products rather than capital expenditure finance. Their primary concern is the quality and predictability of cash generation — specifically, whether the business reliably generates enough revenue and profit to service the interest and repay drawings within the facility term.
The factors that typically carry most weight are:
Trading history — most lenders want to see at least two years of filed accounts, with a preference for consistent or improving revenue.
Management accounts — up-to-date figures demonstrating current trading. A business that cannot produce management accounts within a few days of request creates an immediate credibility issue.
Cash flow forecasts — evidence that the business understands its own cash cycle and can project forward with reasonable accuracy.
Existing facilities — lenders will want to understand what other debt is in place and whether covenants on those facilities interact with the RCF.
Director credit profile — particularly for smaller businesses, the personal credit history of directors remains a material factor. A weak personal profile can narrow lender choice even where the business itself is performing well.
Lender selection matters as much as the application itself. Different lenders weight these factors differently. A business with strong revenue but a patchy trading history will get better terms from specialist lenders who understand that sector than from a clearing bank applying a standard scorecard. Correct lender selection at the outset avoids declined applications and protects the business's credit footprint.
Pinks approach: We review your position before making any lender approach. That means we know which lenders are likely to look favourably at your application before we submit anything — and we do not burn your credit file finding out.
Understanding RCF Covenants
| Covenant | What it means in practice | Risk if breached |
|---|---|---|
| Leverage ratio | Net debt must not exceed a multiple of EBITDA (e.g. 3x) | Lender may demand early repayment |
| Interest cover | Operating profit must cover interest payments by a set multiple | Covenant breach triggers review |
| Clean-down period | Facility must be reduced to zero for a set period each year (e.g. 30 days) | Signals dependency — lender may not renew |
| Negative pledge | You cannot grant security over the same assets to another lender | Cross-default on other facilities |
| Information undertakings | Monthly management accounts, annual budgets, compliance certificates | Failure to report = technical breach |
The clean-down requirement deserves particular attention. A business that cannot reduce its RCF drawings to zero for a month each year is typically telling the lender — and itself — that it is relying on the facility for core operations rather than genuine working capital flexibility. That is a warning sign that the underlying working capital structure needs review, not that the clean-down should be negotiated away.
Common mistake: businesses focus on rate and limit when comparing RCF offers, and overlook covenant terms. An aggressively priced facility with tight covenants can be more disruptive than a slightly higher rate with headroom that suits how the business actually operates.
What Does a Revolving Credit Facility Cost?
Pricing varies considerably depending on the lender, the size of the facility, the quality of the business's financial profile, and whether any security is provided. As a broad guide:
- Interest rates: typically in the range of 0.75% to 6% per month on drawn balances, depending on risk profile and lender type.
- Arrangement fees: usually between 1% and 3% of the facility limit, charged on set-up.
- Non-utilisation fees: where applicable, typically 0.25% to 1% per annum on the undrawn portion.
- Annual review fees: some lenders charge a renewal fee; others roll this into the arrangement structure.
Comparing facilities purely on headline interest rate is rarely sufficient. The total cost of a facility depends on how it is used — a facility with a lower rate but a non-utilisation fee can be more expensive for a business that draws infrequently, and less expensive for one that is consistently drawn.
Pinks presents options in terms of total cost, not just headline rate, so you are comparing like with like.
Why Use Pinks to Arrange a Revolving Credit Facility?
Pinks works with a panel of lenders across the full spectrum of the UK business finance market — from mainstream bank lenders through to specialist working capital providers. For RCFs specifically, the lender market includes providers whose underwriting criteria are specifically designed around sectors such as manufacturing, logistics, distribution, and supply chain — the environments where Tier 1 and Tier 2 supplier funding challenges are most acute.
We do not approach lenders speculatively. Before any application is made, we review the business's financial position and credit profile, identify the appropriate lender panel, and structure the application to present the case as clearly as possible. This protects the business's credit footprint and maximises the probability of approval on appropriate terms.
- Panel of specialist and mainstream lenders — not restricted to a single institution.
- Full review of financial position before any lender approach.
- Clear advice on how an RCF interacts with existing facilities or a planned invoice discounting arrangement.
- Covenant terms explained in plain English before you sign.
- Ongoing support at renewal — not just at inception.
Frequently Asked Questions
A revolving credit facility (RCF) is a pre-approved credit line that allows a business to borrow, repay and borrow again up to a set limit — without reapplying each time. Interest is charged only on the amount drawn down. Unlike a term loan, an RCF is designed to be used and repaid repeatedly, making it well-suited to managing working capital rather than funding a single capital purchase.