At Clopton Capital, we provide UK-based sponsors and professional investors with access to non-recourse commercial loans. As a specialist commercial mortgage broker, we source financing where the lender’s remedy is limited to the property itself, allowing you to scale your portfolio across London, Manchester, and the wider UK without the burden of personal guarantees.
A non-recourse commercial loan is a type of debt where the borrower is not personally liable for the repayment. The defining feature is the absence of a standard Personal Guarantee (PG). Instead, the loan is secured solely by the “bricks and mortar” of the commercial asset and its income stream.
In the event of a default, the lender’s primary and final recourse is to take possession of the property (typically through an LPA Receiver) and sell it to recover their funds. If the sale price is less than the outstanding debt, the lender cannot pursue the borrower’s personal bank accounts, home, or other assets to make up the shortfall.
| Feature | Recourse Loan | Non-Recourse Loan |
| Personal Guarantee | Required (Full or Limited) | Not Required (Subject to Carve-outs) |
| Lender Remedy | Property + Personal Assets | Property Only |
| Typical Borrower | SMEs & Local Developers | Institutional Sponsors & Professional LLPs |
| Asset Type | General Commercial | Stabilised, Income-Producing Assets |
Non-recourse financing is most common in the UK when borrowing through a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV)—usually a Limited Company or LLP.
Lenders who offer non-recourse terms (such as CMBS originators, Life Companies, and Debt Funds) focus heavily on the quality of the asset and the Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR). Because they cannot look to you personally to cover a deficit, the “underwriting” is more pedantic regarding the property’s lease strength, tenant quality, and location.
Even with a non-recourse commercial loan, certain triggers can reinstate personal liability. These are known as “Bad Boy” Carve-outs. These clauses protect the lender against:
Fraud or Misrepresentation: Providing false financial data during the application.
Environmental Issues: Gross negligence regarding hazardous materials on-site.
Misapplication of Funds: Using rental income for personal gain instead of paying the mortgage or property taxes.
Unauthorised Transfers: Selling the property or changing ownership structure without lender consent.
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Loan Size: £2,000,000 to £50,000,000+ (smaller amounts considered for multifamily/BTR).
Leverage: Up to 70%–75% LTV.
Rates: Fixed or floating (priced off SONIA or the Gilt curve).
Term: 5, 7, or 10 years are standard for permanent financing.
Amortisation: 25–30 years, often with Interest-Only options.
Peace of Mind: Professional investors often have multiple high-value assets. Non-recourse debt ensures that a failure in one project (e.g., a major tenant insolvency) does not lead to a “contagion” that threatens their entire personal wealth.
Scalability: Lenders who require PGs often limit how much they will lend based on a sponsor’s personal net worth. Non-recourse lenders care more about the asset’s value, allowing for larger-scale acquisitions.
Joint Ventures: When multiple partners are involved, non-recourse debt simplifies the legal structure because no individual partner has to bear the personal risk for the collective debt.
Protect your personal assets while capitalising on the UK’s most lucrative real estate opportunities.
Not necessarily. While some private funds charge a premium for the lack of a PG, institutional lenders (like Life Cos) offer some of the lowest rates in the market for high-quality, non-recourse stabilised assets.
Stabilised Multifamily (Build-to-Rent), Industrial/Logistics, and Prime Office space are the most common. Retail and Hospitality can also qualify if they show strong historical occupancy and debt yield.
This is a legal ruling where a lender seeks the remaining balance of a loan after a foreclosure sale. In a non-recourse loan, the lender is legally barred from seeking a deficiency judgment against the borrower personally.
This is rare for ground-up development in the UK. Most construction lenders require some form of “Completion Guarantee,” though “Bridge-to-Exit” loans can often be structured as non-recourse.