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The mechanics of the final payment
The last scheduled payment brings your outstanding balance to zero and the loan is repaid. The lender closes the account and the direct debit ends. On an amortising loan the final payment is the same level figure as the rest; occasionally there is a tiny rounding adjustment to settle the last few pence exactly. That is normal.
Releasing security
If the loan was secured, repaying in full triggers the release of that security. A charge registered at Companies House should be marked as satisfied, and any personal guarantee falls away with the debt. This does not always happen automatically or instantly, so it is worth checking. A charge left showing as live on your record after the debt is cleared can complicate future borrowing.
Checking it's all done
After the final payment, get written confirmation from the lender that the loan is fully repaid and the account closed. If security was involved, verify at Companies House that the charge has been marked satisfied, and chase the lender if it has not. Keep the confirmation with your records — it is your evidence the debt is gone. Then, if you plan to borrow again, a cleanly closed loan strengthens your position. See whether repaying improves credit.
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Frequently asked questions
Do I need to do anything when I make my final loan payment?
Mostly it happens automatically — the balance clears and the account closes — but you should get written confirmation the loan is fully repaid, and if it was secured, check that any charge is marked satisfied at Companies House and any personal guarantee is released. Keeping proof and ensuring security is properly discharged protects you and keeps your record clean for future borrowing.
Why is my final payment a slightly different amount?
Usually a small rounding adjustment — over the life of an amortising loan, tiny rounding differences accumulate, and the final payment is trimmed by a few pence to settle the balance exactly to zero. It is entirely normal and not a sign of an error. If the final payment differs by a meaningful amount rather than pence, query it with the lender.
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