Cash Flow Forecast Tool UK

Build a 12-month cash flow forecast for your business. Free 3-month view, or subscribe for £14.99/month for the full 12-month forecast with export and scenario planning.

Enter your forecast

Start with your opening balance, then fill in each month.

CategoryMonth 1Month 2Month 3Month 4Month 5Month 6Month 7Month 8Month 9Month 10Month 11Month 12
Revenue
Cost of sales
Wages
Rent
Utilities
Insurance
Other income
Other expenses
Tax provision

Frequently asked questions

What is a cash flow forecast and why do I need one?
A cash flow forecast predicts your business cash inflows and outflows over a future period, usually 12 months. It helps you spot when you might run out of cash, plan for seasonal dips, decide when to invest, and gives confidence to lenders and investors. It is the single most important financial planning tool for small businesses.
How do I create a cash flow forecast?
Start with your opening bank balance, then for each month estimate: revenue (what you will actually receive, not invoice), cost of sales (materials, direct labour), overheads (rent, wages, utilities, insurance), other income and expenses, and tax provisions. The closing balance of each month becomes the opening balance of the next.
What is the difference between cash flow and profit?
Profit is revenue minus expenses on an accrual basis (when earned/incurred). Cash flow is actual money in and out of your bank account. A profitable business can still run out of cash if customers pay late, you buy stock upfront, or you have large capital expenditure. Cash flow is about timing; profit is about accounting.
How often should I update my cash flow forecast?
At minimum, review and update monthly by replacing forecasted figures with actuals. Many businesses update weekly, especially in the first year or during growth phases. Compare actual vs forecast each month to improve your forecasting accuracy over time.
What should I do if my forecast shows a cash shortfall?
Options include: negotiating better payment terms with suppliers, offering early payment discounts to customers, arranging an overdraft facility before you need it, reducing or delaying non-essential expenditure, seeking invoice finance, or injecting personal funds. The key is spotting shortfalls early, not reacting when the bank account is empty.
Should I include VAT in my cash flow forecast?
Yes. Cash flow should reflect actual cash movements, so include VAT collected from customers and VAT paid to suppliers. Also include your quarterly VAT payments to HMRC. Many businesses are caught out by large VAT payments they have not planned for.
How do I forecast revenue if I am a new business?
Research your market and be conservative. Methods include: bottom-up (how many units can you realistically sell at what price), comparable businesses (industry benchmarks), pipeline analysis (committed orders plus conversion rate on leads). Always create best-case, expected, and worst-case scenarios.
What are the most common cash flow mistakes?
The most common mistakes are: being too optimistic about revenue timing, forgetting annual or quarterly payments (insurance, tax), not accounting for seasonal variations, ignoring payment delays from customers, underestimating startup costs, and not having a cash buffer for emergencies.
Do banks require a cash flow forecast?
Yes. Most banks require a 12-24 month cash flow forecast as part of any business loan or overdraft application. They want to see that you can service the debt and that the business is viable. A well-prepared forecast demonstrates financial competence and increases approval chances.
What is the difference between direct and indirect cash flow?
Direct method lists actual cash receipts and payments (what this tool uses). Indirect method starts with net profit and adjusts for non-cash items (depreciation, changes in debtors/creditors). Direct is better for forecasting and day-to-day management. Indirect is used in formal financial statements.

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