Answer

Should I apply to more than one lender at once?

Submitting full applications to several lenders at once risks clustering hard searches that read as distress — compare with soft-search enquiries instead, then commit to one.

2 min read

EnquiriesCompare with soft searches
Full applicationsCommit to one
ClusteringThe risk
SequenceEnquire then apply

The temptation and the trap

Applying everywhere at once feels like hedging your bets, but full applications usually trigger hard searches, and several in a tight window can look like a company desperate for cash — which underwriters treat as risk. What is meant to improve your odds can quietly worsen them.

The smarter sequence

Separate comparing from committing. Use soft-search enquiries to gather several indications without marking your file, pick the best on total cost with the comparison checklist and repayment calculator, then submit one full application to your chosen lender.

When parallel applications can make sense

Occasionally, on urgent or hard-to-place deals, a broker will place your case with more than one lender — but a good one manages the search footprint carefully. See applying through a broker. As a rule, though, enquire widely and apply narrowly. The credit-file answer explains why the cluster matters.

Frequently asked questions

Does applying to several lenders hurt my chances?

It can, if the applications are full ones that each leave a hard search. Clustered searches read as distress. Comparing with soft-search enquiries avoids the problem entirely.

How do I compare lenders without applying to each?

Use enquiries or agreements in principle, which typically run soft searches invisible to other lenders. That lets you gather several indications and choose one before making any full application.

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.