2 min read
The funding challenge for toy shops
Toy shops load stock heavily ahead of Christmas, committing cash to inventory months before the peak that drives most of the year's sales. Money leaves the business before it comes back, and for toy shops that gap has a particular shape — around equipment, stock, seasonality or the wait for payment. Naming the shape is how you avoid borrowing the wrong way and overpaying for it.
The facility that tends to fit
The natural route here is stock finance, plus a revolving facility. It matches the need rather than forcing a one-size loan onto a specific problem, and where a firm has both an asset to fund and a cash gap to bridge, two matched facilities usually cost less than one stretched to do both. Credicorp lends to limited companies and LLPs with no personal guarantee. Read the underlying guide before committing.
Put real numbers behind it
Size it with our seasonal cash-flow planner and the which finance to buy stock on Learn. A figure taken from a forecast, with repayments matched to when cash actually arrives, beats a round number every time.
How lenders view the trade
Our sector page for toy shops sets out what a lender looks at, and the general answers on whether your sector affects borrowing and how affordability is assessed give the wider picture. When ready, you can apply. General information, not an offer of finance.
Frequently asked questions
Does being a toy shop business affect borrowing?
The sector shapes what a lender assesses — the assets, the stock, the seasonality, the payment terms — but it does not decide the outcome. Affordability and trading history matter more. A well-run business in this trade is judged on its own figures, not a sector label.
Should I use asset finance or a working-capital facility?
Fund an asset with asset finance over its useful life; bridge a recurring cash or seasonal gap with a revolving facility or invoice finance. Matching the tool to the need is what keeps the cost down. This is illustrative and not an offer of finance.
How much can a business in this sector borrow?
It depends on turnover, profitability and how comfortably the repayments fit your cash flow rather than the sector alone. Run your figures through the affordability calculator for a realistic range before you apply.
Related reading

How Do Retailers Fund a VAT Bill After the Christmas Peak?
Christmas is when a retailer collects the most VAT — and the return covering it typically falls due in the…
Read →
How Independent Retailers Fund Seasonal Stock Purchases
Independent retail businesses must buy stock before they sell it, often committing to large orders months…
Read →
How Do Bike Shops Fund Stock and Seasonal Demand?
Bike shops hold expensive bicycle and component stock and see demand peak in spring and summer, committing…
Read →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.