On most construction projects, the money moves last. Labor is scheduled. Materials are purchased. Equipment hits the site. Payroll runs every week, whether the owner has paid or not. The work gets done, inspections pass, and the invoice goes out.
Then the clock starts.
While many contracts reference Net 30 terms, industry data consistently shows that subcontractors often wait 60 to 90 days or more to receive payment. Retainage sits. A change order delays approval. An owner waits for funding. Meanwhile, the next project is already mobilizing, and cash is still tied up in receivables.
After years of working alongside subcontractors, this pattern is consistent. The job may be profitable on paper, the backlog may be strong, but working capital is strained because revenue is trapped in the construction payment cycle. Construction factoring is one of several financial tools designed to close that gap. Before deciding whether it fits your business, it’s worth understanding how it works, what it truly costs, and how it impacts your financial controls.


John O’Bryan