Offer Payroll Loans to Employees — Without Managing It Internally

Small Pay partners with employers to provide a structured payroll loan system — replacing informal salary advance requests with a consistent, external solution.

Employee applies Directly with Small Pay
Loan is issued Handled externally
Repayment via payroll Simple deductions

Why salary advance requests become a bigger problem than they first appear

Most businesses do not plan to manage employee financial support internally. But once salary advance requests start happening regularly, HR, payroll, and management often get pulled into a process that was never designed properly in the first place.

It starts as a once-off request

An employee asks for early access to part of their salary because of a genuine financial issue. In isolation, it feels manageable and reasonable to help.

Then it becomes a repeated internal process

Once requests begin happening more often, the business starts handling them informally — case by case, manager by manager, month after month.

HR ends up carrying decision pressure

HR or management is forced to decide who gets help, when they get it, and how much is reasonable. That creates pressure, inconsistency, and unnecessary internal sensitivity.

Payroll is pulled into work it should not own

Once money moves early, payroll often has to adjust pay runs, track deductions informally, or correct things later. What looks small at the start becomes extra admin over time.

What this creates internally

  • Repeated employee requests before payday
  • Different decisions depending on who is asked
  • No clear boundary between support and lending
  • Manual payroll adjustments and follow-up
  • Pressure on managers to make exceptions

Why this becomes difficult to sustain

  • It is hard to stay fair across the business
  • There is no structured framework behind the decision
  • Internal teams carry work that should sit externally
  • The same issue keeps returning every pay cycle
  • Good intent turns into operational burden

The issue is not that employers want to help. The issue is that informal salary advances create an internal process that becomes harder to manage, harder to keep consistent, and harder to justify over time.

Even when managed well, informal systems don’t hold up

Many businesses try to handle salary advances responsibly — but without a defined structure, the process eventually breaks down.

No consistent framework

Each request is handled in isolation. There is no fixed structure guiding decisions, which makes it difficult to apply the same standard across employees, departments, or time periods.

Fairness becomes difficult to maintain

Two similar situations can result in completely different outcomes depending on who handles the request. Over time, this creates internal tension and perceived inconsistency.

No separation between employer and lending

The business effectively becomes the decision-maker and facilitator of financial support, even if that was never the intention. This blurs the line between employer responsibility and financial services.

Processes rely on individuals, not systems

Decisions depend on managers, HR staff, or payroll teams rather than a defined system. This makes the process fragile and difficult to scale or standardise.

The issue never resolves — it repeats

Because there is no structured solution in place, the same requests continue to come up every pay cycle, creating an ongoing operational burden rather than a one-time situation.

The problem is not the intent to help employees — it’s the absence of a system designed to handle this consistently and independently.

A structured system that removes the issue from your business

Small Pay replaces informal salary advance handling with a defined payroll loan framework — managed entirely outside of your internal teams.

Instead of handling requests case by case, employees access financial support through a dedicated system. Lending decisions, funding, and administration are handled externally, while your business remains involved only where it needs to be — payroll deduction.

This creates a clear separation between employer responsibilities and financial services, while still giving employees access to structured support when they need it.

A consistent framework replaces ad hoc decision-making
All lending and risk sits outside the business
Payroll is only used for structured repayment
The process runs independently of HR and management
What changes immediately
  • No internal handling of requests
  • No case-by-case decisions
  • No informal tracking or follow-ups
  • No pressure on HR or managers

How it works — in simple terms

A structured process that runs independently, with payroll used only for repayment.

1

Employee applies

Employees apply directly through Small Pay when they need short-term financial support.

2

Assessment and approval

Applications are reviewed and approved by Small Pay using a structured decision process.

3

Funds are issued

Approved loans are paid out directly to the employee — with no involvement from the employer.

4

Repayment via payroll

Repayments are deducted through payroll over an agreed period, creating a simple and structured process.

What this gives your business

This is not just a way to handle requests — it changes how the situation is managed entirely.

Removes internal pressure

HR, payroll, and management are no longer responsible for handling or deciding on financial requests from employees.

Creates consistency

Every employee goes through the same structured process, removing inconsistency across departments or decision-makers.

Simplifies payroll

Payroll moves from ad hoc adjustments to a clean, structured deduction process that fits into existing workflows.

Clear separation of responsibility

Your business is no longer involved in lending decisions or funding — that responsibility sits entirely with Small Pay.

Additional revenue stream

Employers earn commission on loans issued to their workforce, creating a structured financial benefit without taking on lending risk or administrative burden.

Supports employees responsibly

Employees gain access to structured financial support without relying on informal or inconsistent internal arrangements.

It removes an ongoing operational issue — and replaces it with a system that is consistent, external, and commercially beneficial.

Simple to implement, with minimal disruption

The setup process is structured and straightforward, with most of the work handled externally.

1

Initial alignment

We align on how the payroll deduction structure will work within your existing payroll setup.

2

Employer onboarding

Your business is onboarded onto the system, with roles and processes clearly defined.

3

Employee rollout

Employees are introduced to the system and can begin applying for payroll loans through Small Pay.

4

Ongoing operation

The system runs independently, with payroll only processing structured deductions each cycle.

There is no system overhaul required — this works alongside your existing payroll process.

Clear structure. No employer risk.

The system is designed so that your business supports employees — without taking on lending responsibility.

You are not the lender

All loans are issued and funded by Small Pay. Your business does not provide capital or approve loans.

No lending decisions internally

Applications are assessed independently through a structured process — not by HR, payroll, or management.

No financial exposure

Your business is not exposed to repayment risk. Loan management and recovery sit entirely with Small Pay.

Defined payroll process

Deductions are structured upfront and run through your normal payroll cycle — no ad hoc handling required.

Your role is simple: Confirm the structure and process payroll deductions — everything else is handled externally.

See if this works for your business

If you're dealing with ongoing salary advance requests, this gives you a structured way to handle it — without adding internal complexity.

No obligation. Just a straightforward conversation.