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    March 20268 min read

    Peak Season Cash Flow Planning for Google Ads

    Q4 is exciting. Revenue spikes, CPCs increase, ROAS looks achievable at scale. But the cash flow reality is brutal: you purchased inventory in August, started heavy ad spend in October, and won't see net cash (after returns) until February. That's a 6-month cash cycle that sinks brands every year.

    The Q4 Cash Collision

    Three massive cash demands converge in Q4:

    • Inventory investment: Purchased 2-3 months before peak season. Cash out before any revenue comes in.
    • Ad spend acceleration: Google Ads spend often doubles or triples in November-December. Billed weekly or monthly.
    • Operational costs: Temporary staff, additional fulfilment capacity, extended customer service hours.

    Meanwhile, revenue is collected over weeks, payment processors hold funds during high-volume periods, and returns arrive in January-February. The cash gap between spend and net receipt can be £100k+ for a £3M brand. This is the growing broke trap at peak intensity.

    Inventory + Ad Spend Timing

    Map the cash timeline for a typical Q4:

    • August: Pay 30-50% inventory deposit. Cash out: £50-150k depending on scale.
    • September: Pay inventory balance. Additional cash out: £50-150k.
    • October: Ramp ad spend. Budget up 50-100% from baseline. First revenue starting to flow.
    • November: Peak ad spend. Black Friday week may be 3-5x normal weekly spend.
    • December: Continued elevated spend through Christmas. Gift purchases spike.
    • January: Returns arrive. 20-40% of Q4 gift purchases may be returned. Cash flows back out.
    • February: Return period closes. Net cash position finally stabilises.

    Payment Processor Lag

    A hidden Q4 cash flow killer: payment processors often increase hold periods during peak season due to higher chargeback risk:

    • Stripe: Standard 2-day payout may extend to 7-14 days for high-volume spikes
    • PayPal: May hold funds in reserve for new or rapidly growing merchants
    • Klarna/Clearpay BNPL: You receive funds on a delayed schedule while the customer pays later

    If 30% of your revenue goes through BNPL and the payout is 14 days delayed, that's a significant cash gap during your highest-spend period. Factor this into your cash model.

    January Returns Cash Drain

    The Q4 revenue number is fiction until returns settle. Gift purchases have 2-3x higher return rates than self-purchases. January return volumes can wipe out December's apparent profit. See refund timing cash flow gap for the full mechanics.

    • • Budget for 25-40% of December gift revenue being returned in January
    • • Each return costs: refund amount + return shipping + restocking labour + potential repackaging
    • • The CPC you paid to acquire that sale is non-refundable - it's a sunk cost
    • • Returns from discounted products may not be resaleable at full price

    Building the Cash Flow Model

    Build a week-by-week cash flow model from August through February:

    • Cash out: Inventory deposits, inventory balance, ad spend (Google Ads billing), fulfilment costs, staff costs
    • Cash in: Revenue receipts (minus payment processor lag), adjusting for BNPL delayed payouts
    • Adjustments: Returns (January-February), chargebacks, working capital facility interest
    • Minimum balance: Set a floor below which cash cannot drop without triggering spend reduction

    This model tells you exactly how much you can afford to spend in November-December without risking a January cash crisis.

    Budget Reserves Strategy

    Practical cash protection tactics:

    • Reserve 20% of Q4 revenue for January returns: Don't treat November revenue as spendable cash
    • Front-load ad spend to October: CPCs are lower pre-Black Friday and learning happens before peak
    • Set weekly spending limits: Cap daily Google Ads spend to prevent algorithm overspend during high-conversion periods
    • Negotiate supplier terms: Push inventory payment to 60-90 day terms to better align with revenue collection
    • Arrange facilities early: If using credit, arrange in August, not November when you're already cash-stressed

    Next Steps