2 min read
Why diversification is a fundable project
Converting redundant farm buildings into holiday accommodation or opening a farm shop is a classic diversification move, and from a lender's point of view it is a well-defined project: a known spend that creates a new, measurable income stream. That is easier to assess than general working capital because the money has a clear purpose and a plausible payback.
How the mixed VAT and income picture is handled
Diversification often changes the VAT position — a farm shop selling hot food or non-food goods, or holiday lets, brings standard-rated income into a business that was largely zero-rated. That is manageable but needs planning. The answer on farm VAT covers the mechanics.
Funding the conversion
A business loan sized to the conversion cost and repaid from the new income is the usual structure, with asset finance for any equipment. Where the project is larger, staging the spend against the build helps keep finance costs down. See how serviced accommodation and farm shops are funded.
Build the case on the new numbers
The application should show projected occupancy or footfall, realistic pricing and how the new income services the borrowing. Our return on borrowing calculator tests whether the project pays for itself, and the using a loan for growth guide frames it. Our agriculture sector page gives context. General information, not an offer of finance.
Frequently asked questions
Will lenders treat a farm diversification differently from core farming?
To an extent — the new activity is assessed on its own projected income and risk, which may differ from the farming operation. A well-evidenced project with realistic figures is judged on its merits, and diversification is a familiar, fundable purpose.
Do I need planning permission before applying for finance?
For a barn conversion or new-build, having planning permission (or permitted-development confirmation) in place strengthens the application considerably, because it removes a major delivery risk. Discuss timing with the lender; some will assess in principle before consent is final.
How is the return on a diversification project judged?
By whether the projected new income comfortably covers the repayments with headroom to spare. The return-on-borrowing calculator tests this. Conservative occupancy and pricing assumptions make for a more credible case than optimistic ones.
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