Cash Flow Management for Small Businesses: A Practical UK Guide
Cash flow management is one of the biggest challenges facing any small business in the UK. You can be winning good contracts and turning a healthy margin, and still find yourself unable to pay a supplier or meet payroll because the money simply hasn’t landed yet. It often catches people off guard.
What is cash flow, exactly?
Cash flow is the movement of money in and out of your business. That’s it. Money coming in (from customers paying invoices, sales, loans, grants) and money going out (wages, rent, suppliers, HMRC, utilities).
The important distinction is that cash flow and profit are not the same thing. A business can be profitable on paper but still run out of cash. You might have £50,000 worth of invoices outstanding, but if none of those clients has paid yet, you can’t use that money to pay your staff on Friday.
Why cash flow matters so much for UK SMEs
The numbers around cash flow management for small businesses in the UK are pretty stark.
Around 50,000 UK SMEs close every year due to cash flow problems caused primarily by late payments — that’s not struggling businesses or bad ideas, it’s businesses that couldn’t bridge the gap between money owed and money received.
Research from FreeAgent found that almost two-thirds (62.6%) of invoices sent by UK SMEs in the past year were paid late. If you’re thinking “that’s not my experience,” consider yourself lucky — you’re in the minority.
The average payment delay across UK businesses now stands at 32 days, with micro and small firms the most exposed to the resulting cash flow risk. And it cascades — 32% of micro businesses said they paid their own suppliers late because their customers had paid them late. One slow payer upstream creates problems all the way down the chain.
The most common causes of cash flow problems
Understanding what causes cash flow problems is the first step to preventing them. Here are the big ones for UK small businesses:
The number one culprit. UK small businesses are owed an average of £21,400 in late payments. The fix starts before you send an invoice: set clear payment terms upfront (30 days is standard; 14 days is worth trying with new clients), issue invoices the moment work is complete, and follow up proactively — don’t wait 45 days to chase a 30-day invoice.
Invoicing late, invoicing incorrectly, or having no consistent process for chasing payment are all surprisingly common. Every day you delay sending an invoice is a day added to when you’ll get paid. Accounting software — Xero, QuickBooks, FreeAgent — automates this and pays for itself quickly.
Many businesses have quiet months — retail before Christmas, trade businesses in January, hospitality outside school holidays. If you don’t plan for these in your busiest periods, they can blindside you. A cash flow forecast lets you see lean months coming and act early rather than panicking.
This one surprises people. Growing fast is brilliant, but it often means spending money before you’ve received payment for the work that growth generates. Taking on bigger contracts might mean hiring staff, buying equipment, or paying for materials — all before a penny comes in. Growing businesses need more cash, not less.
A van breaking down. A key piece of equipment failing. An unexpected HMRC bill. Life happens, and without a cash buffer, one unexpected cost can destabilise an otherwise healthy business. This is why building a reserve matters even when things are going well.
How to manage your cash flow: practical steps
Build a cash flow forecast
A cash flow forecast is simply a week-by-week or month-by-month projection of what money you expect to come in and go out. It won’t be perfectly accurate — it doesn’t need to be. It just needs to show you when you might be tight.
Most accounting software includes a basic forecast, or you can build one in a spreadsheet. At minimum, track:
- Expected income (based on invoices sent and payment terms)
- Fixed outgoings (rent, salaries, subscriptions, loan repayments)
- Variable costs (materials, contractors, marketing spend)
- Known upcoming payments (VAT quarter, Corporation Tax, annual insurance)
Know your VAT quarters and tax deadlines
This catches many small business owners off guard. Your VAT bill, Corporation Tax, and PAYE liabilities shouldn’t surprise you — they’re predictable. But if you haven’t set money aside, they can feel like a crisis when they arrive. Set up a separate savings account and put aside a percentage of every payment you receive:
| Tax | How much to set aside | When it’s due |
|---|---|---|
| VAT | 20% of VATable sales as you go (or net VAT if on Flat Rate Scheme) | Quarterly — 1 month + 7 days after quarter end |
| Corporation Tax | 19–25% of profit (rate depends on profit level) | 9 months + 1 day after your accounting year end |
| PAYE | Calculated monthly — factor into monthly outgoings | 19th of the following month (22nd if paying electronically) |
Tighten up your payment terms
If your standard terms are 30 days, consider moving them to 14 days. If larger clients insist on 30- or 60-day payment terms, factor that into your pricing — longer payment terms are a real cost to your business.
It’s also worth knowing about the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998, which gives you the legal right to charge interest on overdue invoices (currently 8% above the Bank of England base rate) plus a fixed debt recovery charge. Most businesses don’t use it, but it’s worth knowing you have the right.
Keep a cash buffer
The advice you’ll hear from almost every accountant: keep three months of operating costs in reserve if you can. That’s the target, not the starting point — build towards it gradually.
Even a one-month buffer changes how you feel about running your business. You stop making reactive decisions driven by what’s in your account today.
Use invoice financing if you need to bridge gaps
Invoice financing (also called invoice factoring or invoice discounting) lets you access a percentage of the value of outstanding invoices before they’re paid. A lender advances you a proportion of what you’re owed — typically 70–90% — and recovers it when your client pays.
It’s not free money (fees are involved), but for businesses with long payment terms or seasonal cash flow gaps, it can be a useful tool. Worth a conversation with your bank or a specialist lender.
What good cash flow looks like
There’s no single number that defines “good” cash flow management for a small business — it depends on your sector, your cost base, and your growth plans. But here are some markers to aim for:
- You can pay all bills on time — including HMRC, suppliers, and staff, without scrambling
- You have a buffer — at least 4–6 weeks of operating costs sitting in reserve
- You’re not regularly dipping into an overdraft to cover day-to-day costs
- You can forecast 3 months ahead with reasonable confidence
- Late payments from clients don’t destabilise you — because you’ve planned for some slippage
If you’re not there yet, that’s fine — most small businesses aren’t when they start. The key is to move in that direction systematically rather than just hoping things improve.
Free resources worth knowing about
- HMRC Time to Pay scheme — if you’re struggling to meet a tax bill, HMRC will often agree a payment plan. Call the Business Payment Support Service on 0300 200 3835 before the deadline, not after.
- Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) — fsb.org.uk has practical guidance on late payments and your legal rights as a creditor.
- Business.gov.uk — the government’s consolidated resource for business support, including financial guidance and grants.
- Your bank’s business team — worth a conversation if you’re planning for growth or need to discuss an overdraft or credit facility before you actually need it.
More guides for UK small business owners
Right Hand Man covers everything from cash flow and pricing to hiring your first employee and growing your business. Browse our guides or get in touch if you have a question.