Short-term finance for a VAT bill
Bridge a quarterly VAT payment without draining your working capital. Credicorp provides exempt, short-term business finance to UK limited companies and LLPs — a decision often within hours and funds transferred quickly, so a VAT deadline never stalls your trading.
A VAT bill is one of the most predictable pressures on a company's cash — and one of the most disruptive when it lands in the wrong week. HMRC expects payment on a fixed quarterly cycle, but your customers rarely pay on the same rhythm. When a large invoice is still outstanding, or you have just committed cash to stock or payroll, finding the full VAT figure at short notice can force uncomfortable choices. Short-term finance smooths that gap so you can pay HMRC on time, protect your VAT record and keep working capital where it earns.
Why VAT timing catches companies out
VAT is money you have collected on HMRC's behalf, but it does not always sit ready in the bank when the deadline arrives. Most UK VAT-registered businesses file and pay quarterly, one calendar month and seven days after the period ends. Two things commonly go wrong:
- You have already spent the cash. Output VAT collected on sales gets absorbed into day-to-day operations — buying stock, paying wages, settling supplier invoices — so the balance owed is real even when the cash has moved on.
- Your debtors pay later than HMRC expects. If you invoice on 30- or 60-day terms, you may owe VAT on sales your customers have not yet paid for. The liability crystallises before the receivable does.
The result is a genuine, temporary shortfall — not a solvency problem, but a timing one. That is exactly the kind of gap short-term business finance is designed to cover.
The cost of paying VAT late
Missing a VAT deadline is expensive in more than one way. HMRC operates a points-based penalty system for late VAT returns and charges late-payment penalties and interest on tax paid after the due date, with the interest rate rising as the delay lengthens. Beyond the direct cost, a pattern of late payment can affect how HMRC views your business and complicate any future arrangement you might need. Weighed against those consequences, a short, clearly-priced facility that clears the bill on time is often the more commercial choice.
How VAT bridging finance works with Credicorp
Credicorp lends exclusively to UK limited companies and LLPs. A VAT-bridge facility is a short-term loan assessed on your company's trading performance and cash-flow, drawn to cover the VAT due and repaid over a short term as your receivables come in.
- Apply against the company. We underwrite the business — its Companies House registration, trading history and cash-flow — not you as an individual consumer.
- Fast decision. For complete applications a decision often comes within hours, so you can plan around the deadline rather than hope.
- Short, defined term. Facilities are structured to be repaid quickly, typically as the invoices behind the VAT are settled, rather than as long-term debt on the balance sheet.
- Terms shown before you commit. Facility size, repayment schedule and cost are set out in full at offer stage. There are no surprise charges after you sign.
When VAT-bridge finance makes sense
Short-term finance for a VAT bill is most useful when the shortfall is genuinely temporary and the cost of the facility is comfortably outweighed by the cost of paying late or the value of keeping cash working. Typical situations include:
- A large customer invoice is due but has not yet cleared before the VAT deadline.
- You have just committed cash to seasonal stock, a new contract or payroll and cannot unwind it in time.
- An unusually strong sales quarter has produced a bigger-than-normal VAT liability that outpaces collections.
- You would rather preserve your overdraft or reserves as a buffer than exhaust them on a single tax payment.
If a shortfall looks structural rather than temporary, borrowing to pay VAT is not a cure. In that case speaking to HMRC about a Time to Pay arrangement, alongside a wider review of margins and terms, is the more responsible route — and something we would tell you plainly rather than lend into a problem.
Eligibility and how we lend
To be considered your business must be a UK limited company or LLP registered with Companies House, actively trading, VAT-registered and operating a business bank account. Because we lend to incorporated businesses for commercial purposes, this finance sits outside FCA consumer-credit regulation — Credicorp is an exempt business lender under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001. That means a faster, more flexible process than a consumer product, but it also means you do not receive the statutory protections that apply to regulated consumer credit; the facility is a commercial agreement between two businesses. We apply robust commercial lending standards and only offer a facility where your company's cash-flow supports repayment.
Can I use business finance to pay my VAT bill?
Yes. A short-term facility from Credicorp can be used to pay a quarterly VAT liability to HMRC on time, then repaid over a short term as your receivables come in. It is a commercial loan to your company, not a consumer product.
How quickly can the funds arrive before my VAT deadline?
For complete company applications a decision often comes within hours. Once terms are accepted and verification is finished, funds are typically transferred within one to a few working days — so it is worth applying as soon as you can see the shortfall coming rather than on the deadline itself.
Do you require a personal guarantee to fund a VAT bill?
Standard VAT-bridge facilities are assessed on company financials. Where the company's position alone does not support the facility we may discuss additional security, but you will always be told before anything is required — nothing is added after you sign.
Is this regulated consumer credit?
No. Credicorp lends only to UK limited companies and LLPs for business purposes, which falls outside FCA consumer-credit regulation under the FSMA 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001. It is an exempt business-to-business commercial agreement.
What if my VAT problem is not just a timing issue?
If your shortfall is recurring rather than a one-off gap, short-term borrowing is not the right fix. We would suggest contacting HMRC about a Time to Pay arrangement and reviewing your pricing and payment terms. We will tell you plainly if that is the better path rather than lend into an ongoing problem.
Credicorp Limited is an exempt business lender under the FSMA 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001. Finance is available only to UK limited companies and LLPs and is subject to status and company affordability. This page is general information, not tax advice; consult your accountant about your VAT position.