Answer

What is the difference between applying to a bank and an alternative lender?

Banks tend to be slower, stricter and cheaper; alternative lenders faster and more flexible but often dearer — the right choice depends on your urgency, profile and how well you fit a rigid box.

2 min read

BanksSlower, cheaper, stricter
Alt lendersFaster, flexible, dearer
Profile fitDrives the choice
UrgencyFavours alternatives

How the two differ

High-street banks typically offer lower rates but apply rigid criteria and slower processes, and lean toward established, well-fitting borrowers. Alternative and specialist lenders — including online-first providers — move faster, consider a wider range of profiles, and use richer data like Open Banking, but often price the added risk and speed into a higher rate.

Which suits which borrower

If you are an established, profitable company that fits the criteria neatly and time is not pressing, a bank may be cheapest. If you are newer, need funds quickly, have a less standard profile, or have been declined by your own bank, an alternative lender may say yes where a bank will not. See how a broker fits in.

Comparing them properly

Do not choose on rate alone. Weigh speed, the amount offered, flexibility, whether a guarantee is required, and total cost on the repayment calculator. Line the options up with the comparison checklist, then decide which trade-off fits your situation.

Frequently asked questions

Are alternative lenders safe to borrow from?

Reputable ones are — check they are established, transparent about cost, and where relevant FCA-registered. The trade-off for speed and flexibility is often a higher rate, not lower legitimacy. Verify the firm before applying.

Should I try my bank first?

Not necessarily. If your bank is likely to decline your profile or move too slowly for your need, going straight to a better-fitting lender saves time and avoids a wasted search. Match the lender to your situation.

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.