Lloyds Banking Group, which serves as one of the UK’s mortgage lenders, is preparing to discontinue its invoice factoring operations by the end of 2025, marking a further retreat by major high-street banks from specialized financing for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Invoice factoring, also known as invoice finance, enables companies to sell outstanding invoices to a lender at a discount in exchange for immediate cash advances.
This mechanism has been particularly valuable for SMEs facing delayed customer payments, helping them maintain steady cash flow without relying on traditional loans.
For businesses operating on narrow profit margins, it provides a critical lifeline amid persistent late-payment challenges.
As first reported by the FT, the decision aligns Lloyds with other major UK banks that have already scaled back or exited the sector.
Competitors such as Barclays and NatWest have closed their factoring units, while HSBC has imposed stricter criteria, effectively limiting access for many smaller firms.
Industry sources indicate that SME-focused factoring generates limited revenue for large banks, with few opportunities for additional product sales.
Instead, lenders are prioritizing relationships with bigger corporate clients, which offer higher profitability.
Although the service is used by fewer than 1% of Lloyds’ SME customers, the closure could exacerbate pressures on smaller businesses already grappling with rising costs, including minimum wage increases and tax changes.
Industry professionals warn that reduced access to such working-capital tools risks intensifying financial strain in the sector.
Lloyds has declined to officially comment on the plans for now.
However, individuals close to the matter reportedly emphasize that the bank intends to introduce alternative financing options for affected clients to minimize disruption and support ongoing SME lending in other areas.
This move reflects broader strategic shifts under company CEO Charlie Nunn, who is focusing on core retail and commercial banking activities.
As economic headwinds persist, including relatively high interest rates, the withdrawal of major players from invoice factoring now leaves independent specialists and fintech providers as primary alternatives for SMEs seeking flexible cash-flow solutions.
The development underscores a seemingly growing divide in UK business lending, where large institutions increasingly tend to favor scale as well as predictability over the specialized needs of smaller enterprises.