Answer

What is a good current ratio for a business?

A current ratio around 1.5 is often seen as comfortable — enough short-term assets to cover short-term bills with a cushion — though the ideal varies by sector.

2 min read

~1.5Often comfortable
Above 1.0Assets cover bills
Sector-specificNo universal figure

What it measures

The current ratio divides current assets by current liabilities. Above 1.0 means you can cover short-term bills from short-term assets; too low signals a squeeze, very high can mean idle cash.

How lenders use it

Lenders read it as a solvency signal. A healthy ratio supports a stronger borrowing case; a weak one prompts questions. Improve it by collecting faster and managing short-term debt. See reading your balance sheet.

What it means for you

Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally, and takes no personal guarantee. See business loans or apply online.

Frequently asked questions

What if my current ratio is below 1?

It means short-term liabilities exceed short-term assets, which can signal a cash squeeze. Some efficient businesses run it deliberately, but for most it is a flag to address.

Can a current ratio be too high?

Yes. A very high ratio can mean cash or stock sitting idle rather than being put to work. A comfortable cushion is healthy; excess is inefficient.

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.