Slice is built around a specific idea: you have a genuine one-off business bill you would rather spread, and we pay that bill in full today so the supplier is not kept waiting. That shapes which bills fit and which do not.
The kinds of bill that fit well
- A supplier invoice — stock, materials, equipment, professional services.
- A tax bill — for example a quarterly VAT payment.
- A utility or service renewal — a one-off renewal or annual charge.
- A one-off repair or replacement — an unexpected cost that has to be paid now.
What makes a bill eligible
| Requirement | Why |
|---|---|
| A real, documented bill | You provide a copy — a PDF, photo or screenshot — so we can see what is being paid. |
| A genuine business purpose | It must be a cost of the business, in line with our eligibility rules. |
| A supplier we can pay directly | We pay the supplier in full today using their bank details, so we need those details. |
| A one-off amount | Slice is for a specific bill, not an open-ended or recurring commitment. |
Slice is not for ongoing or open-ended spending, for paying yourself, or for anything that is not a genuine business bill. If you want flexible, repeated borrowing, a revolving facility like Credicorp Flex is the better tool.
The same eligibility rules apply as for our other products: a UK limited company or LLP, trading at least six months, with a UK business bank account. For the cost, see how much Slice costs; for cash-flow planning, see using Slice well for cash flow. Because this is lending to a company for business purposes, it sits outside FCA consumer-credit regulation under Article 60B FSMA RAO 2001 and is not covered by the Financial Ombudsman Service or the FSCS.
See also: Can I repay Credicorp Slice early?, Can I use Slice more than once?, Can I change my Slice instalment dates?.