Answer

What does it cost to borrow £50,000?

There's no single figure — the cost of £50,000 turns on your rate, term and fees — but you can work out the exact total repayable for any quote before you commit.

2 min read

Rate, term, feesThe three drivers
No fixed pricePriced per company
Total repayableThe figure that counts
Shortest affordable termCuts the cost

Why the cost varies

Borrowing £50,000 has no fixed price. What you repay depends on the rate you're offered — set from your accounts and any security — the term you take, and the fees on the deal. At £50,000 the term choice drives a large swing in total interest, so model several terms before committing. A stronger company over a shorter term pays materially less than a newer one over a longer term. See how your rate is set.

Working out your total

Turn any quote for £50,000 into a real cost with three numbers: the rate, the term and every fee. On a reducing-balance loan, the monthly payment times the number of months is the total repayable; subtract the £50,000 borrowed and you have the cost of borrowing. Add any up-front fees not already in the payment. That fully-loaded total — not the headline rate — is what to compare. See comparing true cost.

Keeping the cost down

Two levers cut the cost of £50,000 most: the shortest term your cash flow can sustain, and the lowest rate your accounts support — which you influence by strengthening the application and, where suitable, offering security. Overpaying once the loan runs does the same on a reducing-balance product. See cutting the cost of borrowing.

Work out the exact total for your rate and term on the true cost calculator, and for a firm figure on {amount_label}, apply to Credicorp — a quote doesn't commit you.

Frequently asked questions

Roughly how much does £50,000 cost to borrow?

It genuinely depends on your rate, term and fees, so any single figure would mislead. The shorter the term and lower the rate, the less you pay in total. Rather than rely on a rough number, enter your actual quote for £50,000 into a true-cost calculator to see the exact total repayable — the only figure that reflects your deal.

Does a longer term make it cheaper each month but dearer overall?

Yes — spreading £50,000 over a longer term lowers the monthly payment but raises total interest, because you borrow for longer. The monthly figure matters for affordability, not cost. To keep the total down, choose the shortest term your cash flow can sustain and the best rate your accounts support, then compare offers on total repayable.

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.