The active service is at credicorp.co.uk.
This is our brand site, so you can't apply, get a quote or pay here. But if you run a UK limited company or LLP and need short-term credit, the links below take you straight to the right part of credicorp.co.uk.
What Creditcorp lends
Credicorp Limited is the lender in the Creditcorp Group, and it's the one you'll deal with. We lend short-term to UK limited companies, LLPs and PLCs — body- corporate lending under Article 60B of the FSMA Regulated Activities Order 2001, outside the FCA's consumer-credit regime.
The borrower is the company, not you. We don't take a personal guarantee. You'll find pricing, eligibility, loan amounts and terms over on credicorp.co.uk — the links are below.
Where to go on credicorp.co.uk
Pick a link and it'll drop you straight onto the right page of credicorp.co.uk.
For new applicants
- Business Bridging Loan Short-term lending to UK Ltd, LLP and PLC borrowers
- Creditcorp Flex Revolving facility for incorporated businesses
- Creditcorp Slice Split a supplier bill into instalments; flat fee, no personal guarantee
- Compare the three Loan, Flex and Slice side by side
- What we offer Products, eligibility, pricing at a glance
- How we lend Underwriting approach, affordability checks, decisioning
- How it works Step-by-step walkthrough from application to funding
- Our technology Signed PDFs, audit log, Open Banking, automated-decision review
- Apply now Start a new application online
For existing customers
- Customer portal Sign in to manage your account and view statements
- Make a payment Bank-transfer details inside your account
- Help with payments Hardship and flexibility options, told early
- Vulnerability support Extra care when life is harder than usual
- Forms & requests Documents and request forms
- FAQs Answers to common customer questions
- Support centre Searchable knowledge base
About Creditcorp
- About Creditcorp Operator background, mission, customer principles
- Contact us Phone, email, post — every channel listed
- Transparency reporting Voluntary quarterly reporting on applications and approvals
- Modern slavery statement Voluntary anti-slavery statement
- Audio recording notice How and when we record calls — and how to opt out
- Careers Open positions at Creditcorp
- Available languages Welsh, Gaelic, Scots and additional UK languages
Guides & explainers
- Guides hub The operator's plain-English guides to business borrowing
- Why no personal guarantee What it means for directors that Creditcorp does not take one
- Pricing in plain English How the cost of borrowing is set out, without jargon
- Affordability over algorithms How lending decisions are reached
- How Open Banking is used What data is read, and what is not
- Case studies How real incorporated borrowers have used the products
- Money tools Free loan-cost, interest and affordability calculators
Brand & trade marks
- Brand hub The operator's brand home — identity, marks and usage
- Trade mark notice Creditcorp and Creditcorp, on the operator site
- Brand style guide Colour, type and logo rules
- Brand assets Downloadable logos and marks
- Permitted brand usage How the marks may and may not be used
- Coexistence: the news item The operator note on the CM Beyer / Creditcorp coexistence
Legal & policies
- Legal & policies hub All operator policies in one place
- Terms and conditions Customer terms of service
- Privacy notice How the operator handles customer data
- Cookies Operator cookie policy
- Responsible lending The operator's responsible-lending principles
- Feedback & complaints How to raise a concern; internal process
Before you apply
Two things worth knowing before you start an application on credicorp.co.uk:
- The loan agreement is with your company, not you personally. Credicorp Limited lends to bodies corporate. The director is not the borrower and does not provide a personal guarantee.
- The lending is unregulated business credit. Body-corporate lending sits outside the FCA's consumer-credit regime, which has practical implications for the protections available to the borrower. The lending and regulation page explains this in detail.
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