{"id":391,"date":"2023-08-05T21:20:42","date_gmt":"2023-08-05T11:20:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/chipkie.com\/?p=391"},"modified":"2026-04-14T11:49:28","modified_gmt":"2026-04-14T01:49:28","slug":"borrowing-money-from-family-the-benefits-and-risks-you-need-to-consider","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chipkie.com\/uk\/2023\/08\/05\/borrowing-money-from-family-the-benefits-and-risks-you-need-to-consider\/","title":{"rendered":"Borrowing Money From Family: The Benefits and Risks You Need to Consider"},"content":{"rendered":"

Lending money within families is one of the oldest financial arrangements in existence \u2014 and one of the most poorly documented. Every year in the UK, billions of pounds change hands between relatives with nothing more than a verbal promise and a handshake. Some of these arrangements work beautifully. Others destroy relationships, trigger unexpected tax bills, and leave people with no legal recourse when things go wrong. The difference almost always comes down to whether both parties treated the arrangement with the same rigour they would apply to any other financial transaction.<\/p>\n

Why Family Loans Are So Appealing<\/h3>\n

The attractions are obvious and genuine. A family lender can offer flexibility that no bank or building society would entertain: repayment holidays during tough months, zero or minimal interest, no credit checks, and terms shaped around your actual circumstances rather than an algorithm’s assessment of your risk profile. If you have a thin credit file, a past default, or you simply need a short-term bridge, a family loan can be a lifeline.<\/p>\n

There is also a meaningful cost saving. Even a modest personal loan at 7% APR on \u00a320,000 over five years costs roughly \u00a33,700 in interest. Borrow the same amount from a parent at 0% and that money stays in your pocket. For younger borrowers saving for a house deposit or managing the cost of retraining, the financial advantage is significant.<\/p>\n

But the appeal can also be a trap. The very informality that makes family loans attractive is what makes them dangerous \u2014 for both borrower and lender \u2014 when circumstances change.<\/p>\n

The Tax Implications Most People Ignore<\/h3>\n

HMRC does not simply look the other way because money moves between relatives. Several tax triggers can apply, and ignorance is not a defence.<\/p>\n