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Covenant-Light Lending: What It Means for UK Borrowers

James Porter

James Porter

Finance Specialist · Aug 4, 2026 · 6 min read

Covenant-Light Lending: What It Means for UK Borrowers - Spark Finance UK business finance guide

Financial covenants are the conditions embedded in business loan agreements that can trigger a default or accelerate repayment even when you are servicing the debt on time. The shift toward 'covenant-light' lending in institutional markets has gradually influenced the UK mid-market, and understanding what covenants exist, how they are tested, and what constitutes a breach is increasingly important for UK business directors managing growing balance sheets.

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Common financial covenants in UK business lending

The most common financial covenants in UK business lending are: interest cover ratio (EBITDA divided by interest expense, typically minimum 2x-3x), leverage ratio (net debt divided by EBITDA, typically maximum 3x-4x), minimum EBITDA (absolute floor on profitability), and minimum liquidity (minimum cash or available facility balance). Some agreements also include revenue or turnover covenants, though these are less common.

Covenants are typically tested quarterly or annually against management accounts or year-end accounts. The test date and the test period matter: a covenant tested on 31 December based on the preceding 12 months is very different from one tested against the current quarter only. Understanding exactly how and when your covenants are tested helps you plan and avoid surprises.

What happens when a covenant is breached

A covenant breach triggers a 'technical default', which gives the lender the right (but not the obligation) to demand immediate repayment of the facility. In practice, most lenders prefer to work with borrowers to resolve a temporary covenant breach through a waiver rather than calling in the loan - but the right to do so exists and can be exercised.

The consequences of a covenant breach, even one that is managed and waived, can include: a waiver fee (typically 0.5-1.5% of the facility), an increase in interest margin, additional reporting requirements, and a tightening of future covenant headroom. Being proactive - notifying the lender before the breach is formally recorded - almost always leads to a better outcome than the lender discovering it from reporting.

"Understanding and negotiating your covenant headroom at the point of origination is worth far more than trying to manage a breach after the fact."

- James Porter, Finance Specialist

Negotiating covenant terms on new facilities

Covenants are negotiable at the outset of a facility, and businesses that understand this use the negotiation process to build appropriate headroom. A leverage covenant set at 3.5x where your current leverage is 1.5x gives you far more operational flexibility than one set at 2.0x. Getting this right at the start is far easier than trying to obtain waivers later.

If your business is seasonal, negotiating quarterly covenant tests that exclude your weakest trading quarter - or using an LTM (last twelve months) test rather than a quarterly snapshot - can significantly reduce covenant pressure during off-peak periods. These points are routinely negotiated in larger UK lending transactions and are worth raising even for smaller facilities.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is a covenant waiver and how do I request one?

A covenant waiver is a formal agreement from the lender not to exercise their default rights following a specific breach. You request one by contacting your lender before the breach is formally tested, explaining the circumstances and your plan to return to compliance.

Can I have a business loan with no financial covenants?

Some lenders, particularly fintechs and unsecured lenders, offer facilities with minimal or no financial covenants. These typically come at a higher rate or with tighter amount limits than covenanted facilities from mainstream lenders.

What is the difference between a covenant and a condition precedent?

A condition precedent is a condition that must be met before the loan is made. A covenant is an ongoing obligation that must be maintained throughout the life of the facility.

The bottom line

Covenants are a standard feature of business lending, not a threat. UK directors who understand them, monitor them actively, and communicate proactively with lenders when headroom tightens maintain the best possible relationships with their lending partners. Spark Finance reviews covenant structures as part of every facility review we conduct for UK clients.

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