Monday, November 25, 2024

How to make a personal guarantee work for your and your small business

Being a small business owner in 2023 is a high stakes game – a truth revealed by a new survey showing that a third have put their home and life savings on the line for their business by signing a Personal Guarantee for a business loan.

If their business fails, they risk losing everything.  Furthermore, 15% of those surveyed anticipate becoming a personal guarantor for a business loan within the year. The findings of the survey by Purbeck Personal Guarantee Insurance demonstrates how difficult it has become for small business owners to access funding without taking the serious step of signing a personal guarantee.

The survey also found that while half of small businesses plan to secure new finance this year, about half are borrowing to ease cash flow or to pay off existing outstanding debt.

Todd Davison, MD of Purbeck Personal Guarantee Insurance said: ”In today’s turbulent economy, it will come as no surprise that small business owners are seeking additional finance but it has become increasingly difficult, since the pandemic, for a small business to find funding without a personal guarantee requirement. It is vital that business owners fully understand the risks of signing a personal guarantee and importantly how to mitigate them.  This can range from sharing the risk to using personal guarantee insurance to help settle the debt, should the business fail.  So far in 2023, we have seen more SME owners apply for personal guarantee insurance to mitigate the risk of business failure, than at any time previously.”

Five ways to make a personal guarantee work for your business

  1. Before signing a personal guarantee on a loan seek independent advice from an accountant, solicitor or personal broker who can advise on ways personal risk might be cut.
  2. Establish if the personal guarantee can be shared amongst co-directors so the risk is not shouldered by one person.
  3. Ask the lender if a time limit can be agreed for the guarantee or a cap on the amount, but remember, if interest rates rise, costs added to the debt can mount up.
  4. See if there is the option to guarantee part of the loan meaning that settlement of the debt is sought first from the company’s assets, before enforcing the guarantee.
  5. Consider personal guarantee insurance to mitigate the risk which means that, in the event of a business failure, 80% of the loanwill be settled by the insurance rather than the business owner’s personal assets.

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