Crowdfunding vs Business Loans: The Right Tool for UK Businesses

Charlotte Ellis
Head of Marketing · Oct 16, 2026 · 7 min read
Crowdfunding has attracted significant attention as a way for UK businesses to raise capital from many small investors. But for established businesses needing growth capital, the comparison between crowdfunding and a conventional business loan is not always made clearly. This guide examines both options on the metrics that matter: cost, speed, dilution, marketing benefit, and the characteristics of businesses for which each is truly the right fit.
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Types of UK crowdfunding relevant to businesses
The three main crowdfunding models relevant to UK business finance are: equity crowdfunding (selling shares to many investors through platforms like Crowdcube or Seedrs), debt crowdfunding or peer-to-peer lending (borrowing from many lenders through platforms like Funding Circle), and reward crowdfunding (raising money from customers in exchange for early access or rewards rather than financial returns).
Equity crowdfunding involves giving up shares, which is fundamentally different from debt finance. It is more appropriate when the business needs growth capital that cannot be comfortably serviced as debt, when the brand benefits from broad public investment, or when SEIS/EIS tax relief is a significant factor in the fundraising appeal.
When a business loan is better than crowdfunding
For established profitable UK businesses seeking growth capital, a conventional business loan is almost always cheaper and faster than equity crowdfunding. Equity crowdfunding typically costs 20-30% of the business (in equity dilution) plus 5-8% platform fees, along with several months of management time preparing the campaign. A business loan at 6-9% interest, arranged in weeks, preserves equity and is often cheaper on a total-cost basis.
Debt crowdfunding through peer-to-peer platforms can be competitive with conventional lending for some businesses, but rates on these platforms have increased significantly as the market has matured. The 2025-2026 UK P2P lending market offers rates broadly comparable to challenger bank lending for similar risk profiles, with the advantage of faster onboarding but the disadvantage of less flexible structures.
"For most established UK businesses, a conventional business loan preserves more equity and costs less than an equity crowdfunding round. Know when each is truly the right tool."
- Charlotte Ellis, Head of Marketing
When crowdfunding genuinely wins
Equity crowdfunding adds real value when: the fundraise can also serve as a marketing campaign (a consumer brand raising from its customers gains brand advocates as well as capital), when SEIS/EIS tax relief makes equity investment very tax-efficient for investors, or when the business genuinely needs risk capital for a high-uncertainty project that does not suit debt.
Reward crowdfunding is genuinely complementary to debt finance rather than competitive with it. A UK business running a Kickstarter campaign to pre-sell a new product is not raising finance in the traditional sense - it is validating demand and reducing the working capital requirement for launch. This can be an excellent precursor to a conventional growth loan.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is UK equity crowdfunding regulated?
Yes. Equity crowdfunding platforms must be FCA-authorised. Investments through them are typically not protected by the FSCS, and investors should understand that investing in early-stage businesses carries significant risk.
What is the typical cost of raising equity through crowdfunding in the UK?
Platform fees typically run at 4-8% of the amount raised. Legal costs for a crowd round are also significant (£10,000-£30,000 for standard rounds). Plus the dilution cost of the equity itself.
Can I combine crowdfunding with a bank loan?
Yes. Some UK businesses complete a crowdfunding equity round to strengthen the balance sheet and then use the improved financial position to access a bank loan for additional working capital or investment.
The bottom line
Crowdfunding and business loans serve genuinely different purposes, and the best choice depends on your business stage, the purpose of the capital, and your appetite for equity dilution. Spark Finance helps UK businesses understand the full range of options and identify which structures best fit their specific situation.
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