How to Structure Finance Across a UK Multi-Business Group

Julian Marks
CEO · May 4, 2027 · 8 min read
UK business owners with multiple companies face a set of finance challenges that single-entity owners do not encounter. The interaction between group entities, the question of where to hold finance, intercompany lending arrangements, and which entities provide security are all decisions with significant financial and tax implications. Getting the group finance structure right protects each business while enabling the group to access capital efficiently.
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Group finance structure fundamentals
The most common structure for a UK multi-business owner is a trading group with a holding company at the top. Finance is typically arranged at holding company level (providing lenders with access to security across all subsidiaries) or at specific trading company level where the asset or cash flow being financed sits in that entity.
Intercompany loans between entities within the group require careful documentation and pricing at arm's length rates to satisfy HMRC's transfer pricing requirements. They also create intercompany receivable and payable positions that lenders assess when considering the financial position of any individual entity within the group.
Cross-guarantees and security sharing
Group lenders typically require cross-guarantees between all material entities: each company guarantees the debts of the others. This is standard practice for group lending but creates a situation where financial difficulties in one entity can spread to others. Structuring the group to limit this contagion where appropriate - particularly for higher-risk trading activities - is a risk management consideration.
Security sharing arrangements between group lenders must be clearly documented and understood by all parties. Where multiple lenders are involved at group level, the priority of charges and the allocation of security between lenders needs to be agreed in a deed of priority. This is standard practice for complex group structures but requires specialist legal advice.
"The most capital-efficient multi-business groups are those where finance structure, cash management, and tax planning are coordinated rather than managed separately."
- Julian Marks, CEO
Optimising cash across the group
Cash pooling - where surplus cash from profitable entities is automatically transferred to a group cash pool and deployed where needed within the group - is one of the most effective working capital tools available to multi-entity UK businesses. This reduces total external borrowing by eliminating the inefficiency of some entities borrowing at cost while others hold surplus cash earning minimal interest.
Tax considerations interact significantly with cash management across a group. Dividends between UK group companies are generally tax-free, but the timing of dividend flows can affect each entity's standalone financial position as seen by their respective lenders. Coordinating cash management strategy with the group's accountants ensures tax efficiency does not inadvertently undermine financial reporting for lending purposes.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use assets in one group company to secure a loan for another?
Yes, through a cross-guarantee and debenture structure. The lending entity must agree to taking security across multiple group entities, and lender consent is required before charges can be granted.
What is group relief and does it affect business lending?
Group relief allows UK tax losses to be shared between group entities, reducing the overall group tax liability. This can improve the net cash position of profitable entities, which affects their standalone financial position for lending purposes.
Should each business in my group have separate bank accounts and facilities?
Generally yes for operational clarity and because lenders prefer clean entity-level financial information. However, cash pooling can link these accounts efficiently to minimise total borrowing costs across the group.
The bottom line
Multi-business group finance is an area where the interaction between legal structure, tax planning, and lending strategy creates both significant opportunities and potential pitfalls. UK business owners with multiple entities benefit greatly from advisers who understand all three dimensions and can coordinate them into an efficient group finance structure. Spark Finance advises on the lending component of group structures alongside specialist accountants and lawyers.
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