Dynamic discounting is a flexible early payment solution where buyers offer suppliers the option to receive payment before the invoice due date in exchange for a discount. Unlike fixed early payment terms, the discount rate is dynamic — the earlier the payment, the higher the discount offered to the buyer.
What It Is #
Traditional early payment discounts used static terms such as “2/10 net 30” — meaning the supplier offers a 2% discount if the buyer pays within 10 days. These arrangements are inflexible. If the buyer pays on day 12 or day 15, no discount applies.
Dynamic discounting modernises this concept. Payment can be made at any point between invoice approval and the due date. The discount scales proportionally — earlier payment means a larger discount for the buyer, while the supplier still receives cash sooner than under standard terms.
A key difference from reverse factoring and supply chain finance is that dynamic discounting is self-funded by the buyer using its own surplus cash, rather than relying on a third-party financier.
How It Works #
- Supplier submits and buyer approves an invoice.
- Supplier sees early payment options with a sliding discount rate based on payment date.
- Supplier selects a payment date that suits their cash flow needs.
- Buyer pays early using its own cash reserves at the corresponding discount rate.
- Transaction settles — buyer records a lower payable, supplier receives accelerated cash.
Dynamic vs. Static Discounting #
| Dynamic Discounting | Static (2/10 Net 30) | |
|---|---|---|
| Payment flexibility | Any day between approval and due date | Only within a fixed window |
| Discount rate | Slides based on timing | Fixed percentage |
| Funding source | Buyer’s own cash | Buyer’s own cash |
| Supplier choice | Yes — fully optional | Limited |
| Technology required | Yes — platform-based | No |
Dynamic Discounting vs. Reverse Factoring #
| Dynamic Discounting | Reverse Factoring | |
|---|---|---|
| Funder | Buyer (own cash) | Third-party financier |
| Buyer benefit | Return on surplus cash | Extended DPO without cash outlay |
| Best for | Buyers with excess liquidity | Buyers who want to preserve cash |
| Can combine? | Yes — both can be used on the same platform | Yes |
Practical Example #
A buyer has €5 million in surplus cash sitting in a low-yield account. They activate dynamic discounting. A supplier has a €200,000 invoice due in 60 days. The supplier opts for payment on day 10, accepting a 1.2% discount. The buyer pays €197,600 on day 10 instead of €200,000 on day 60. The buyer earns an annualised return of approximately 7.3% on deployed cash — above typical money market rates.
Key Points #
- Buyers earn returns on surplus cash by paying early at a discount
- Suppliers access liquidity at lower cost than many forms of bank borrowing
- No third-party involvement — it is a direct buyer-supplier arrangement
- Entirely optional for suppliers — can be used on individual invoices as needed
- Can complement reverse factoring programs
