Answer

Does restructuring a loan cost more in the long run?

Restructuring usually raises total interest — it spreads debt over longer or adds a fee — but it is far cheaper than the arrears, fees and record damage of the default it prevents.

2 min read

Usually costs moreLonger or fees
Far cheaper than defaultThe real comparison
Keeps account healthyProtects your record
Weigh vs doing nothingNot vs original loan

Why restructuring adds cost

A restructure — extending the term, lowering the payment, consolidating — generally increases total interest, because you are usually borrowing over a longer period or carrying a balance for longer. There may also be a variation fee. Compared with the original loan running to plan, a restructure costs more. That is the comparison people make, and it is the wrong one.

The right comparison

If you are considering a restructure, the realistic alternative is not the loan running smoothly — it is missing payments. Against that, a restructure is cheap. Arrears bring fees, extra interest, a credit-file mark that raises future costs, and at the extreme a default that can call in the whole balance. The modest extra interest of a restructure is a fraction of that. Judge it against doing nothing, not against a perfect world. See the cost of falling behind.

Restructuring well

To keep the extra cost down, restructure only as far as you need to make payments comfortable, not further, and have a plan to accelerate repayment once things recover — overpaying later can claw back some of the added interest. Ask for the new total repayable so the cost is explicit, and check for any early-repayment charge if the restructure involves refinancing.

Model the restructured payment on the repayment calculator, and if you are under pressure, read what to do if you can't repay.

Frequently asked questions

Is it ever cheaper to restructure than to keep the original terms?

In pure total-interest terms, rarely — a restructure usually adds cost versus the original loan running to plan. But that is not the real choice when you are struggling. Against the actual alternative of missed payments, fees and record damage, restructuring is far cheaper. The right question is whether it costs less than doing nothing, and the answer is almost always yes.

Can I undo a restructure once cash flow recovers?

You can effectively unwind some of the added cost by overpaying once you are able, on a reducing-balance loan — bringing the effective term back in and reducing the interest the restructure added. Check for any early-repayment charge first. A restructure is best seen as temporary relief you accelerate out of, not a permanent new normal.

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.