Interest rates have been on a slow journey down from the highs of 2023, but they remain elevated compared to the near-zero environment that businesses had grown used to. For small business owners, that means the cost of borrowing, the value of holding cash, and the pressure on customers' spending all look different from a few years ago.
Here is a clear-eyed look at how the current rate environment affects your business and what you can do about it.
The direct impact on business borrowing
If your business has a variable rate loan, overdraft, or credit facility, higher interest rates mean higher monthly repayments — and higher interest costs on your profit and loss account. For a business with £100,000 of variable rate debt, the difference between a 2% rate environment and a 6% rate environment is around £4,000 per year in extra interest. That is money that could have gone to investment, staffing, or profit.
Fixed rate borrowing is not affected by rate changes for the duration of the fixed term — but when fixed periods end and businesses refinance, the new rates can come as a shock for those who locked in at historically low rates in 2020 or 2021.
What to watch for
- Overdraft facilities: Often variable rate and sometimes overlooked — check what rate you are actually paying
- Invoice financing: Typically pegged to the Bank of England base rate, so costs have risen with it
- Equipment leases and hire purchase: Usually fixed at the point of agreement, so existing deals are protected — but new agreements will reflect current rates
- Director loans: If your company has borrowed from you as a director, HMRC's official rate for beneficial loans changes periodically and may affect your tax position
The indirect impact — customers and suppliers
Your customers are also feeling the pressure of higher rates. Consumer confidence tends to soften when mortgage costs rise and real wages are squeezed — and that can translate into slower decision-making, delayed payments, or reduced order volumes.
On the supplier side, businesses that are themselves under cash flow pressure may tighten payment terms, push for early payment discounts, or reduce credit limits. It is worth reviewing your supplier relationships and understanding which ones are critical to your operations.
Cash flow — the most important number in your business
Profit matters, but cash flow is what keeps a business alive. A profitable business with poor cash flow can still fail. Higher interest rates affect cash flow in several ways:
- Higher loan repayments reduce your monthly net cash position
- Customers who are themselves under pressure may pay more slowly
- If you are holding stock, the cost of financing that stock has increased
- Investment decisions that made sense at 2% rates may not stack up at 5% or 6%
One upside: Higher rates mean better returns on cash savings. If your business holds cash reserves, make sure you are getting a competitive rate on those deposits. Business savings accounts and notice accounts now offer meaningful returns — money sitting in a current account earning nothing is a missed opportunity.
Stress-testing your cash flow
One of the most useful things you can do in the current environment is stress-test your cash flow projections. This means asking: what happens to my monthly cash position if revenue drops by 15%? What if a major customer pays 30 days late? What if I need to refinance my borrowing at a higher rate?
These are not pessimistic exercises — they are responsible planning. A business that has already modelled the downside scenarios is far better placed to respond calmly if one of them materialises.
Fixed vs variable — making the right borrowing decision
If you are considering new borrowing or refinancing existing debt, the fixed versus variable question is front of mind for most businesses. There is no universally right answer, but here is the framework:
- Fixed rate: Gives you certainty and protects against further rises, but you will not benefit if rates fall significantly — and current fixed rates already reflect market expectations of some future cuts
- Variable rate: More risk in the short term but potentially cheaper over the life of the loan if rates continue to fall
- Short fixed, then review: Some businesses take a two or three year fixed rate to provide near-term certainty while retaining flexibility to refinance as the rate environment becomes clearer
Your decision should factor in how much rate risk your cash flow can absorb, how long you need the borrowing for, and what your lender is actually offering.
Practical steps to take now
- Know your current rate on every debt facility — overdraft, loans, credit cards, director loans
- Review your cash flow forecast for the next 12 months — if you do not have one, now is the time to build it
- Chase outstanding debtors — average debtor days tend to lengthen when customers are under pressure, so proactive credit control matters more than ever
- Check your cash savings rate — if you are holding reserves, make sure they are working for you
- Model your refinancing position — if any fixed rates expire in the next 12 to 18 months, understand what refinancing at current rates would cost
Want a clearer picture of your cash position?
Cash flow forecasting is included in our Clarity package, and available as a standalone service. Understanding your numbers properly is the foundation of confident business decisions.
Get in TouchThis article is for general information purposes. Interest rates and economic conditions change frequently. This does not constitute financial advice — please speak to a qualified professional before making borrowing or investment decisions.