How-to

How to account for a business loan in your books

When your company borrows, the loan is not income and the repayments are not simply an expense — getting the accounting right keeps your profit honest and your balance sheet accurate. It is straightforward once you see how the pieces fit.

2 min read

Loan= liability not income
Splitinterest vs capital
Interestis the cost

Illustrative only. Assumes a fixed rate and equal monthly repayments (annuity). Your actual offer depends on Credicorp’s assessment of your company.

Step 1: Record the loan as a liability

Drawing down a loan increases your cash and creates a matching liability — it is money owed, not revenue. Split it between current (due within a year) and non-current (longer term) on the balance sheet.

Step 2: Separate interest from capital

Each repayment has two parts: capital, which reduces the loan liability, and interest, which is the cost of borrowing. Only the interest is an expense in your profit and loss; the capital portion just shrinks the balance-sheet liability.

Step 3: Recognise fees correctly

Arrangement fees and other loan costs are usually spread over the loan's life rather than expensed all at once, matching the cost to the periods that benefit. Check the terms and treat fees consistently.

Step 4: Watch the effect on your ratios

A new loan raises your gearing and adds interest that reduces net profit. Lenders and you both read these, so understand how borrowing reshapes the accounts — sensible borrowing that funds growth is a positive story.

Step 5: Keep it clean for the next application

Accurately accounted borrowing, serviced on time, builds a track record that strengthens future finance applications.

Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally, and takes no personal guarantee. See indicative terms on business loans, or apply online in minutes.

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Frequently asked questions

Is a business loan income?

No. A loan is money owed, so it is recorded as a liability, not revenue. Only the interest on it is an expense; receiving the loan itself does not increase your profit.

How do I account for loan repayments?

Split each repayment into capital and interest. The capital portion reduces the loan liability on the balance sheet; only the interest is an expense in the profit and loss. Treating the whole repayment as a cost overstates expenses.

How are loan arrangement fees accounted for?

Usually spread over the life of the loan rather than expensed all at once, so the cost is matched to the periods that benefit from the borrowing. Check the loan terms and apply the treatment consistently.

Funding for UK limited companies

Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally — short-term working capital with no personal guarantee. See what your business could access.