A default occurs when a borrower breaks the terms of a credit agreement. The most common trigger is missing payments, but an agreement can also list other events of default, such as breaching a covenant or providing false information. When the breach reaches a level the agreement defines as serious, the lender can formally record that the account is in default.
How a default is recorded
Before recording a default, a lender is generally expected to warn the borrower and give a reasonable opportunity to put things right. Where credit reference agencies are used, a default is then reported and stays on the credit file for a set period — typically six years from the date the default was registered — even if the balance is later cleared. This is why a default has a longer-lasting effect than a single late payment.
Consequences of a default
A recorded default signals to other lenders that the borrower did not keep to the agreement, which can make future borrowing harder or more expensive. Depending on the agreement, a default may also let the lender demand the full balance, end the facility, or begin recovery action. The specific consequences depend on the terms that were signed.
Avoiding and resolving a default
The most effective step is to make contact early. A lender that knows about a difficulty in advance can often agree forbearance — a temporary arrangement such as reduced or paused payments — that helps the borrower recover before the position becomes a formal default. Engaging promptly almost always leaves more options open than waiting.
Default in business lending
Credicorp lends to UK limited companies and limited liability partnerships rather than to consumers. The principle is the same: a default is a serious breach of the agreement with real consequences, so a business that sees trouble ahead should talk to us early. We would far rather agree a workable arrangement than record a default. Because we lend to the company and not to its directors — there is no personal guarantee and no director liability — a default sits against the business's credit file, not a director's personal record.
Default notice
A default notice is the formal warning a lender sends before registering a default. It sets out the breach, the action needed to put it right, and the time allowed to do so. Acting on a default notice promptly — by paying the arrears or agreeing an arrangement — is usually enough to stop a default being recorded. Ignoring it almost always makes the position worse.
Common questions about loan default in the UK
What is a loan default in the UK?
A loan default in the UK is the formal recording of a serious breach of a credit agreement — most often accumulated missed payments. Once the breach reaches a threshold defined in the agreement, the lender registers the default, which appears on the borrower's credit file and signals to other lenders that the account was not kept to its agreed terms.
How long does a default stay on a UK credit file?
A default stays on a credit file for six years from the date it was registered, even if the outstanding balance is cleared before that period ends. After six years it is automatically removed from credit reference agency records.
Can a business avoid a default being registered?
Yes — making contact early is the most effective step. A lender that is aware of a difficulty in advance can often agree forbearance: a temporary arrangement such as reduced payments, a short payment holiday, or a structured plan to clear arrears. Acting before a default notice is issued almost always leaves more options open than waiting.
Does a business loan default affect the director personally?
With Credicorp, no. We lend to the company — not to its directors — and we do not require a personal guarantee. A default sits against the business's credit record, not the director's personal file. Directors of businesses with a personal guarantee from another lender should read the terms of that separate agreement.
Related / See also
See arrears, forbearance, credit reference agency, late-payment fee, covenant and recovery. If repayment is becoming difficult, contact us early at /help/; dedicated support for vulnerable customers is at /legal/vulnerability/.
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