2 min read
When a guarantor is needed
A guarantor — usually a director giving a personal guarantee — is asked for when the company alone does not fully reassure the lender: a younger business, a smaller balance sheet, a larger ask relative to the company, or some adverse history. The guarantee gives the lender a backstop where the company's own strength falls short.
When you can avoid one
An established, profitable company with a solid balance sheet can frequently borrow unsecured and unguaranteed, because it is strong enough to stand on its own — see no-guarantee borrowing. Sometimes company security, rather than a personal guarantee, satisfies the lender instead. The guarantee guide sets out the alternatives.
If you need one
Usually the guarantor is you or a co-director; occasionally a lender accepts a third party with sufficient assets. Understand the exposure, ask whether the guarantee can be capped or dropped for a slightly higher rate, and confirm the company can genuinely service the loan on the affordability calculator so the guarantee is never called.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get a business loan without any guarantee?
Yes, if your company is strong and established enough to reassure the lender on its own. Newer, smaller or higher-risk applications usually need a director's guarantee, though company security can sometimes substitute.
Who can act as a guarantor?
Most often a director of the borrowing company. Some lenders accept a third-party guarantor, such as a family member, if they have enough assets and take independent advice. The guarantor takes on serious personal liability either way.
Related reading

Can I apply for a business loan with no personal guarantee?
Yes — no-guarantee facilities exist for stronger, established companies, but expect a higher rate, a lower…
Read →
What does signing a personal guarantee commit me to?
A personal guarantee makes you personally liable for the company's debt if it cannot pay — potentially your…
Read →
Can a family member be a guarantor on a business loan?
Sometimes — a lender may accept a third-party guarantor with sufficient assets, but they will assess that…
Read →
Director's guarantee vs company-only borrowing
A director's guarantee puts your personal assets behind the company's debt; company-only borrowing keeps the…
Read on Learn →
Business borrowing affordability calculator
See whether a new repayment fits your monthly cash flow before you apply — enter your numbers and read the…
Read on Tools →Funding for UK limited companies
Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally — short-term working capital with no personal guarantee. See what your business could access.