Answer

Can I apply for a second business loan while repaying the first?

Yes, if the combined repayments remain affordable — lenders assess your total commitments, so the existing loan reduces, but does not automatically block, your capacity for more.

2 min read

PossibleIf affordable
Total debtAssessed together
CapacityExisting loan reduces it
PurposeMust stack up

How lenders view a second facility

An existing loan does not bar a second one, but its repayments count against your affordability. The lender assesses your total commitments versus your cash flow, so the room for new borrowing is whatever is left after servicing what you already owe. A strong, growing company can often support more; a stretched one cannot.

When it makes sense

A second facility is sensible when it funds something that generates its own return and the combined repayments sit comfortably within cash flow. It is a warning sign when it is used to plug a gap the first loan should have covered, or to service the first — that is a debt spiral, not growth. Test the combined burden on the affordability calculator.

Alternatives to a second loan

Sometimes the better move is to refinance or consolidate rather than stack a second facility on top — the debt consolidation calculator helps you compare. A flexible credit facility can also be cheaper than a second fixed loan if the need is variable. See how many times you can apply.

Frequently asked questions

Does having one loan make a second harder to get?

It reduces your remaining affordability, since the first loan's repayments count against you, but it does not automatically block a second. A profitable, growing business can often support more; the question is combined affordability.

Is it better to top up the first loan or take a second?

Often topping up or refinancing into one larger facility is simpler and cheaper than running two, avoiding duplicate fees and two schedules. Compare the total cost of each route before deciding.

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.