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Business Loan Covenants: The Complete UK Director's Guide

James Porter

James Porter

Finance Specialist · Feb 23, 2027 · 8 min read

Business Loan Covenants: The Complete UK Director's Guide - Spark Finance UK business finance guide

Business loan covenants are the ongoing conditions attached to your loan agreement that must be maintained throughout the life of the facility. They go far beyond making monthly repayments: they restrict what you can pay in dividends, what additional debt you can take on, and whether you need lender consent before making significant business changes. Most UK directors sign loan agreements with covenants they have not fully understood. This comprehensive guide explains every type and what each means for how you run your business.

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Financial covenants: the critical numbers to track

Financial covenants are the conditions most likely to cause problems for UK businesses. The most common are: interest cover ratio (EBITDA / interest expense, typically minimum 2.0x-3.0x), leverage ratio (net debt / EBITDA, typically maximum 3.0x-4.5x), minimum EBITDA (an absolute floor on profitability), and minimum free cash flow. These are tested at specified intervals against management or statutory accounts.

Building a monthly covenant monitoring dashboard - even a simple spreadsheet that calculates each covenant metric as management accounts are produced - gives directors advance warning of approaching breaches rather than discovering them when the formal test date arrives. The businesses that manage covenants best are those that treat them as live business metrics rather than static legal obligations.

Negative covenants: what you need permission for

Negative covenants prevent the business from taking certain actions without lender consent. Common examples include: taking on additional debt above a specified threshold (often 10-15% of the total facility), disposing of material assets, changing the nature of the business, paying dividends above a specified maximum, and making capital expenditure above agreed annual limits.

These covenants are designed to protect the lender's position by preventing actions that would materially change the risk profile of the lending. But they also affect how directors run the business: if your loan limits capital expenditure to £250,000 per year and you want to spend £400,000, you need to request a covenant relaxation. Not knowing this covenant exists until you are about to make the expenditure creates unnecessary complication.

"Reading your covenants carefully before signing and monitoring them proactively throughout the facility are the two most important things you can do to maintain a healthy lender relationship."

- James Porter, Finance Specialist

Information covenants and when to communicate proactively

Information covenants require the business to provide specified financial information to the lender at set intervals: management accounts (usually quarterly), annual accounts (within a specified number of months of year end), compliance certificates confirming covenant compliance, and notifications of material adverse events.

The material adverse event notification is often the most consequential information covenant. If you lose a major customer, face a significant unexpected cost, or discover a legal issue, your loan agreement may require you to notify the lender proactively. Failing to do so, and having the lender discover the issue through other means, damages trust and potentially constitutes a technical default.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can I get my loan covenants relaxed during a difficult trading period?

Often yes, through a formal waiver or amendment. Approaching the lender proactively, with a clear explanation of the situation and a credible plan for return to compliance, gives the best chance of a cooperative response.

What is a compliance certificate and when do I need to provide one?

A compliance certificate is a formal statement from the company (usually signed by a director or CFO) confirming that all financial covenants are being complied with as of the test date. Typically required quarterly or annually alongside financial statements.

What happens if I pay a dividend that breaches my loan covenant?

It constitutes a breach of the covenant, giving the lender the right to demand immediate repayment. This is one reason to check your loan agreement before declaring any dividend above the minimum level.

The bottom line

Loan covenants are a normal feature of business lending, not a threat. UK directors who understand their covenant obligations and manage proactively within them maintain strong lender relationships and preserve their options for future finance. Spark Finance reviews covenant packages as part of our facility assessment service and helps UK businesses build monitoring systems that prevent covenant surprises.

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