Millions of Brits lending to family and friends to bridge the gap

1.6 million people have lent money directly to a friend or family member to help them start or grow a business, a new study reveals.

More than 1.6 million people have lent money directly to a friend or family member to help them start or grow a business, according to research from peer to peer lender ThinCats.

In a constrained lending environment, entrepreneurs are turning to loved ones for support, with an average sum of £4,479 being lent at a time. At least £7.2 billion has changed hands in this way across the UK, as business owners rely on social networks to plug the lending gap.

The ThinCats study indicates that parents, who have the understanding and means to support their loved ones, are behind much of the family lending trend. People aged over 55 are almost three times as likely to have made such a loan as any age group below them, with one in 20 having done so, suggesting much of the £7.2 billion total is down to parents giving their children a leg up with their business.

This lending to friends and family members is understandable given the financial pressures on entrepreneurial businesses. In 2015, banks turned down 26 per cent of the 324,000 loan applications made by SMEs, with UK companies facing an annual funding shortage of close to £4 billion.

The alternative finance sector, in particular peer to peer business lending platforms, is helping to fill this funding gap, cutting out banks to provide greater reward for both borrower and lender. These platforms have lent £3.4 billion to British businesses since records began in 20143.

While still short of the £7.2 billion lent directly by friends and family, this figure is set to rise following a new government initiative launched this week. The SME finance matchmaking service will require banks to point borrowers toward alternative lenders if they can’t help directly.

Kevin Caley, founder and chairman of ThinCats, thinks that since the financial crisis in 2008, SMEs have had a pretty torrid time sourcing finance from traditional avenues, so it’s inevitable that some business owners are turning to friends and family for help.

Caley adds, ‘However, this sort of lending comes with all sorts of personal and emotional baggage, and it’s important that anyone in this position knows there is a healthy alternative finance market out there, with greater flexibility to lend when the banks will not.

‘The good news is, this tightening of lending from banks has encouraged us to become a nation of peer to peer lenders, giving everyday investors the opportunity to make healthy returns through the emergent alternative finance sector. Over 160,000 people have already lent money through a peer to peer platform, and based on the 1.6 million already doing so through loved ones, we could well see many more.’

Further reading on family loans

Owen Gough, SmallBusiness UK

Owen Gough

Owen was a reporter for Bonhill Group plc writing across the Smallbusiness.co.uk and Growthbusiness.co.uk titles before moving on to be a Digital Technology reporter for the Express.co.uk.

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