Revolving Credit Facilities: The Flexible Alternative to Term Loans

George Wilks
Commercial Lead · Jun 16, 2026 · 7 min read
A revolving credit facility (RCF) is one of the most flexible and underused financing tools available to UK businesses. Unlike a term loan where you borrow a fixed amount and repay it over a fixed period, an RCF works like a credit card at corporate scale: you draw what you need, repay when you have cash, and draw again. The interest accrues only on the amount outstanding. For businesses with variable or seasonal cash flow, this structure is often significantly cheaper than carrying a fixed term loan at full utilisation.
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How revolving credit works in practice
You negotiate a credit limit with the lender - say £500,000. You then draw on this as needed, perhaps drawing £200,000 in October to fund pre-Christmas stock, repaying £150,000 in January when customer payments arrive, and carrying £50,000 through Q1. You pay interest only on what you have drawn, plus a commitment fee on the undrawn portion (typically 0.5-1.5% per annum on the unused balance).
The facility is 'revolving' because once you repay, the capacity is immediately available again. This is the key difference from a term loan. For businesses that need working capital headroom rather than a fixed capital sum, an RCF provides both the insurance of having capacity available and the cost efficiency of not paying for capital you are not using.
Who qualifies and at what size
Most UK lenders offer revolving credit facilities from £50,000 to several million pounds. At the smaller end (£50k-£250k), qualification criteria are similar to unsecured business loans. At larger amounts (£500k+), lenders typically want two or more years of trading history, positive net assets, and financial covenants linked to EBITDA coverage ratios.
Sectors with variable income particularly benefit: seasonal businesses, project-based businesses, and companies with lumpy contract income all find that an RCF handles their cash flow needs more efficiently than fixed-rate term borrowing. Construction, professional services, hospitality, and events businesses are common users.
"An RCF provides the insurance of available capacity with the cost efficiency of only paying for what you use - a combination that suits most growing UK businesses."
- George Wilks, Commercial Lead
Comparing RCFs with alternatives
The main alternatives to a revolving credit facility for working capital purposes are bank overdrafts, unsecured business loans, and invoice finance. Overdrafts are generally more expensive and can be called in at any time. Term loans are less flexible and involve paying interest on capital you may not need continuously. Invoice finance addresses a similar need but is tied directly to your debtor book rather than being a general-purpose facility.
Many UK businesses run multiple facilities simultaneously: an RCF for general working capital headroom alongside invoice finance for the debtor book, and an asset finance line for equipment. This layered approach can be highly efficient if managed well, and a good broker will help you structure the combination correctly rather than defaulting to a single product.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a revolving credit facility and an overdraft?
Both are flexible, but an RCF typically has a formal term (1-3 years), cannot be called in without notice, and usually has lower rates. An overdraft is technically repayable on demand and often more expensive.
Does drawing on a revolving credit affect my credit score?
The facility itself shows on your credit file, but utilisation patterns are assessed over time. Consistently using and repaying within terms generally demonstrates financial management ability rather than harming your score.
How long does it take to arrange a revolving credit facility?
For facilities up to £250k, decisions can come in 24-72 hours with a fast-track lender. For larger facilities, expect 1-3 weeks for full due diligence, documentation, and drawdown.
The bottom line
Revolving credit facilities are one of the best-value working capital tools available to established UK businesses, yet many owners either do not know they exist or assume they are only for larger companies. Spark Finance helps UK SMEs access RCFs from over 250 specialist lenders, and our brokers will assess whether an RCF, a term loan, or a combination approach is the right fit for your specific trading pattern.
Check your eligibilityAbout the author

George Wilks
Commercial Lead
George leads commercial relationships at Spark Finance, specialising in property-backed finance including bridging loans, development finance, and commercial mortgages. He works with investors, developers, and owner-occupiers to structure short and long-term property finance.
