Slice is at its best when timing, not affordability, is the problem. The cost is coming whether you like it or not — what you need is to spread it so it lines up with money you know is on the way.
Common moments Slice helps
- A large supplier invoice arrives before the customer who triggered it has paid you
- An annual cost lands in one lump when your income is monthly
- You want to take an early-settlement discount from a supplier but need to spread your side
- A one-off purchase would otherwise drain the buffer you keep for payroll or tax
Why a one-off structure helps
Because Slice has a clear start and end, it does not leave an open facility tempting you to keep drawing. You handle the bill, you clear it, and it is done. That makes it easy to map against a specific incoming payment.
When to pause
If you would struggle to fund the instalments even when your expected revenue arrives, splitting the bill only moves the pressure. Slice should ease a timing gap, not paper over a shortfall. If money is genuinely tight, talk to us early rather than committing.
See also: Credicorp Flex or Slice for a cashflow need?, Slice or Flex — which Credicorp product fits? and Bridging loan, term loan, or credit facility: what's the difference?.