Asset Finance vs Refinancing: What's the Difference?
If you've ever Googled "how to free up cash in my business" or wondered whether there's more you could be doing with your equipment, vehicles, or machinery - you've probably come across both asset finance and refinancing. They sound similar, but they do very different things.
Understanding the difference could save your business money, unlock growth capital you didn't know you had, and help you make smarter financing decisions going forward. Let’s break it down.
Firstly, what is asset finance?
Asset finance is a way of acquiring something your business needs, without paying for it outright. Instead of tying up a large chunk of working capital in a single purchase, you spread the cost over time through fixed monthly repayments. The asset itself (the equipment, vehicle, or machinery) typically acts as the security for the finance agreement.
The most common forms of asset finance include:
Asset finance is designed to help you acquire something new or something you don't yet own, all while preserving cashflow and keeping capital free for other priorities.
So, what is refinancing?
Rather than funding a new purchase, asset refinancing unlocks value from something you already own.
Here's how it typically works:
It's also sometimes called a sale and leaseback arrangement.
The key here is that your business is asset-rich but cash-light. You've got valuable equipment, vehicles, or machinery sitting on your balance sheet (fully paid for and working hard) but that value is locked up. Refinancing converts it into liquid capital you can deploy elsewhere.
Assets commonly used for refinancing include commercial vehicles, plant and machinery, specialist equipment, and in some cases commercial property.
The core difference? Asset finance helps you get something new and asset refinancing helps you release cash from something you already have.
When does asset finance make sense?
Asset finance is worth exploring when:
Asset finance covers both hard assets (machinery, vehicles, manufacturing equipment) and soft assets (IT systems, software, fit-outs, telecoms). If your business depends on any kind of equipment or infrastructure to operate - physical or digital - there's likely a finance structure that fits.
When does refinancing make sense?
Refinancing is best suited when:
Which one does your business need?
Both tools exist to make your assets work harder for your business - they just operate at different stages of the asset lifecycle. If you're planning ahead and investing in growth, asset finance keeps your capital free. If you've already invested and need to unlock what's tied up, refinancing puts that investment back to work.
Either way, the goal is the same: more flexibility, better cashflow, and a financing structure that supports where your business is going.
Want to explore your options? Talk to the TSF Finance team today and we’ll search the market for the best route for you.
We specialise in asset finance, refinancing, invoice finance, commercial loans, and working capital solutions for UK businesses. Get in touch to discuss what's right for you.