Growth Guarantee Scheme: extended to 31 March 2030

The Growth Guarantee Scheme (GGS) is the UK government's flagship SME lending guarantee, run by the British Business Bank. It was due to end on 31 March 2026 but was extended to 31 March 2030 in the October 2024 Autumn Budget, with £500 million of additional capacity. If your business is UK-trading with turnover under £45 million, GGS-backed facilities are available from around 70 accredited lenders covering term loans, asset finance, invoice finance and revolving credit up to £2 million.

At a glance

Scheme operator
British Business Bank
Scheme period
1 July 2024 to 31 March 2030
Maximum facility
£2 million per business group
Turnover ceiling
£45 million per year
Government guarantee
70% to the accredited lender
Borrower liability
100%, including any PG
Eligible structures
Ltd, LLP, partnership, sole trader, not-for-profit
FundBiz routes
Ltd, LLP, partnerships of 4+ only

Who qualifies

  • UK-trading business, primary commercial activity in the UK.
  • Turnover under £45 million per year (group-level, not single-entity).
  • Not in financial difficulty as defined by the scheme (broadly: not in insolvency, not subject to a winding-up petition, not undischarged from a prior insolvency event).
  • Borrower fits the accredited lender's own credit policy on top of the scheme rules.

What facilities GGS covers

  • Unsecured and secured term loans (typically up to £2 million)
  • Asset finance, including hire purchase and finance lease
  • Invoice finance (factoring and discounting; covered in depth at our sister site MarketInvoice)
  • Overdrafts and revolving credit facilities

Accredited lenders, where to find the live list

The British Business Bank publishes the live accredited-lender list, which changes as new lenders are accredited and existing ones drop out. Always check the live list before applying.

As of mid-2025 the list includes most UK high-street banks (Lloyds, NatWest, HSBC, Barclays, Santander), the major challenger banks (Allica Bank, OakNorth, Aldermore), Funding Circle, and around 60 specialist asset, invoice and term lenders.

If you bank with one of the high-street banks listed above, the Growth Guarantee Scheme application is usually offered through your existing relationship manager rather than as a separate product.

If a Growth Guarantee Scheme lender declines you

A GGS decline at one accredited lender does not preclude another, but the underwriting drivers tend to be consistent across mainstream-bank accredited lenders. Reapplying repeatedly to high-street GGS lenders is usually a poor use of time.

The FundBiz post-decline matcher routes by decline reason rather than by scheme. If your GGS application was declined for sub-2-year trading or low turnover, the answer is MCA, asset finance, or specialist working-capital alternatives. If it was declined for CCJ, missed payments or sector, the answer is a specialist post-decline lender.

FundBiz's panel includes specialist post-decline lenders that are not GGS-accredited (Capify, 365 Business Finance, Liberis, YouLend) plus GGS-accredited specialists (Funding Circle, iwoca for some products).

Frequently asked questions

What is the Growth Guarantee Scheme?

A UK government-backed lending scheme run by the British Business Bank. It provides a 70% government guarantee to accredited UK lenders on facilities to UK SMEs, supporting access to working capital, term loans, asset finance, invoice finance and revolving credit up to £2 million per business.

When does the Growth Guarantee Scheme end?

The scheme has been extended to 31 March 2030. The original Growth Guarantee Scheme that started 1 July 2024 was due to end on 31 March 2026. The October 2024 Autumn Budget extended it by four years and added £500 million of additional capacity to the British Business Bank to support the extension.

Who is eligible for a Growth Guarantee Scheme facility?

UK businesses with turnover up to £45 million per year that are trading commercially in the UK. The scheme covers Ltd companies, LLPs, partnerships, sole traders and not-for-profits. FundBiz routes Ltd, LLP and partnership applicants only; sole traders are routed elsewhere given our panel's Ltd-only focus.

How big a facility can I get under GGS?

Term loans and overdrafts up to £2 million per business group. Asset finance and invoice finance also available under the scheme via accredited lenders that offer those products. The 70% government guarantee is to the lender, not to the borrower; you remain liable for the full debt.

Which lenders are accredited under the Growth Guarantee Scheme?

The British Business Bank publishes the live accredited-lender list. As of mid-2025 it includes most UK high-street banks and challengers (Lloyds, NatWest, HSBC, Barclays, Santander, Allica Bank, OakNorth, Aldermore, Funding Circle and around 60 others spanning term lending, asset finance, invoice finance and specialist providers). Always check the live list at the British Business Bank before applying.

What does the 70% government guarantee mean for me as the borrower?

The guarantee is to the lender, not to you. If the facility defaults, the lender can claim 70% of the loss from the British Business Bank. As a borrower you remain personally and corporately liable for the full debt, including any director personal guarantee. The scheme does not change your repayment obligation.

Can I get a Growth Guarantee facility if I have a CCJ or recent missed payments?

Accredited lenders apply their own credit policy on top of the scheme rules. A CCJ or recent missed payment will typically still cause a decline at a mainstream accredited lender. The scheme is a guarantee structure, not a relaxation of credit standards. If you have credit issues, route via the FundBiz post-decline matcher rather than reapplying to other accredited lenders.

What do I do if an accredited Growth Guarantee Scheme lender declines me?

A decline by one accredited lender does not preclude another, but the credit drivers are usually consistent across the panel. If the decline is sub-2-year trading or insufficient turnover, route to specialist alternatives (iwoca, Capify, MCA against card flow, asset finance against equipment). If the decline is CCJ or sector exclusion, route to specialist post-decline lenders. The FundBiz matcher does this routing.

Run the matcher

Tell us your turnover, trading time and ticket size. We score against GGS-accredited lenders on our panel first, then surface specialist post-decline alternatives if GGS fits poorly.

Open Growth Guarantee Scheme matcher →

Last reviewed: 7 May 2026. By Oliver Mackman.

Check what finance your business qualifies for

Free, no-obligation. Matched to UK specialist lenders in 60 seconds.

Step 1 of 3 · Your business

Start typing and we'll search Companies House.

Your details are secure. See our privacy policy.

Soft credit search · Decision in 24-72 hours · Limited companies, LLPs and partnerships of 4+