When prices keep going up, small businesses feel the squeeze fast. Cash that once lasted three months now barely covers six weeks. This guide breaks down three practical steps to keep your cash flow healthy when inflation bites.

Step 1: Speed Up Money Coming In

The faster cash hits your account, the safer your business becomes. Inflation makes every delay more costly. Focus on tightening your payment cycles and cutting customer drag.

Start by auditing how long customers take to pay. Then layer in incentives and stricter terms. Small tweaks here compound quickly.

Table 1: Tactics to Accelerate Cash Inflows
TacticHow It WorksExpected Impact
Offer early-pay discounts2/10 net 30 terms (2% off if paid in 10 days)20-40% faster payment
Switch to upfront depositsCollect 50% before starting workReduces unpaid invoice risk
Accept digital paymentsACH, credit cards, mobile walletsFunds arrive in 1-2 days vs. 7-10
Invoice immediatelySend bills same day, not end of weekCuts payment delay by 3-5 days
Use automated remindersEmail/SMS nudges before due dateReduces late payments by 30%

Maria runs a small printing shop in Ohio. She started asking for 50% deposits on all orders over $500. Her average collection time dropped from 21 days to 8 days. She no longer chases late checks.

Key-Points
Cash Timing Beats Cash Amount

A dollar today is worth more than a dollar next month during inflation. Speed up collections even by a few days — it compounds across every customer.

Watch Invoice Aging Closely

Not all customers pay at the same speed. Sort them by risk to focus your energy where it matters most.

Table 2: Customer Payment Risk Categories
CategoryDays OutstandingAction Required
Green0-15 daysReward with loyalty perks
Yellow16-30 daysSend friendly reminders
Orange31-45 daysCall directly; pause new orders
Red46+ daysDemand payment plan or legal action

Jake, a freelance web developer, color-coded his clients. He discovered two "red" clients owed 60% of his outstanding invoices. He stopped new work for them until they caught up.

Step 2: Control Costs Without Choking Growth

Inflation pushes costs up from every side — rent, supplies, shipping, wages. The trick is cutting without killing the parts of your business that make money.

Split every cost into three buckets. Treat each bucket differently.

Table 3: Cost Control Framework During Inflation
Cost BucketDefinitionStrategy
Core costsSpending that directly drives salesProtect and optimize; negotiate better rates
Support costsNeeded but not customer-facingReduce 10-15%; seek alternatives
Nice-to-have costsConvenience or comfort spendingPause or eliminate until stability returns

Core costs might include raw materials for a product you sell, or software your team uses daily. Nice-to-have costs could be premium office snacks or attending every trade show.

Lisa owns a small bakery. She kept her organic flour supplier (core) but switched from branded packaging to plain boxes with a stamp (support). She canceled her monthly magazine ads (nice-to-have). Saved $3,200 per month with no sales drop.

Table 4: Supplier Negotiation Tactics That Work Now
TacticWhen to UsePotential Savings
Lock in long-term contractsExpect prices to rise further5-15% vs. spot pricing
Buy in bulk with partnersMinimum orders too high alone10-20% volume discount
Switch to local suppliersShipping costs spikingCut freight costs 20-40%
Renegotiate payment termsYou pay faster than neededNet 30 to net 60 frees cash

Tom, a hardware store owner, teamed with two other local shops. Together they ordered direct from a manufacturer. Each saved 18% and got free shipping on bulk orders.

Key-Points
Cut Fat, Not Muscle

Be surgical. Ask: "If I cut this, will sales drop?" If yes, protect it. If no, reduce or remove it.

Step 3: Build and Protect a Cash Reserve

Inflation makes surprises more expensive. A machine breaks. A key supplier goes under. A customer delays payment. Your buffer absorbs the shock.

Most small businesses keep too little cash on hand. During inflation, that risk multiplies.

Table 5: Cash Reserve Targets by Business Type
Business TypeMinimum ReserveComfortable Reserve
Stable recurring revenue (subscriptions, retainers)3 months expenses5-6 months expenses
Project-based or seasonal4 months expenses6-8 months expenses
High growth, high uncertainty5 months expenses8-12 months expenses
Just started (under 2 years)4 months expenses6 months expenses

Build this reserve by sweeping a set percentage of every payment received. Treat it like a non-negotiable expense.

Carlos runs a landscaping business. He now auto-transfers 10% of every deposit to a separate savings account. In eight months, he built a $14,000 reserve. When his mower engine failed, he paid cash instead of taking a high-interest loan.

Where to Park Reserve Cash

Your reserve needs to be safe and accessible. But during inflation, idle cash loses value fast. Find the middle ground.

Table 6: Reserve Storage Options Compared
OptionLiquidityYield (approx.)Best For
Business savings accountImmediate3.5-5%Emergency portion
High-yield business account1-2 days4-5.2%Core reserve
Short-term Treasury bills (T-bills)4 weeks to 6 months4.5-5.5%Planned reserves
Business money market1-3 days4-5%Flexible needs
Key-Points
Separate Your Reserve

Keep reserve cash in a different account at a different bank if needed. Out of sight, out of mind, out of reach for daily spending.

Key Takeaways

Key PointWhat It MeansAction Item
Speed up collectionsEvery day of delay costs more in inflationOffer 2/10 net 30; invoice same day
Cut smart, not deepProtect spending that drives revenueSort costs into core, support, nice-to-have
Build a real reserveCash buffers shrink in real terms during inflationAuto-transfer 10% of deposits to separate account
Negotiate everythingPrices are flexible, especially nowAsk for better terms, bulk discounts, longer payment windows