Loan agreement templates

These loan agreements let you document lending of any amount by and to individuals, business partnerships and companies. There may be no security, or the borrower may give a personal guarantee, or secure against physical goods or financial assets.

Whether you wish to formalise lending money to a member of your family for a deposit on a property, or help a business partner with short-term cash flow issues, or record a loan between subsidiaries, we have a template that suits.

Friends and family loan agreement

62 Reviews

This agreement aims to bridge the gap between not using a document at all, and using a longer, more comprehensive one.

It makes clear to the borrower that the loan is to be repaid.

Despite its simplicity, the document is legally binding. You can take action if the borrower doesn't pay on time, or uses the money for a reason not agreed.

It is suitable for situations such as lending to a friend or family member:

Unsecured loan agreement: person to person; private or business

26 Reviews

This is a simple agreement where the lender does not require security, perhaps because the borrower is certain to repay or perhaps because risk is priced into a higher interest rate.

Either or both parties could be a person or a company, making this agreement suitable for lending:

Loan agreement: private borrower; secured on physical assets

11 Reviews

For a loan secured against tangible assets of any size and type, such as a car, stock, equipment or fixed plant.

Suitable for lending to someone for purposes such as:

The document includes optional provisions for:

Loan agreement: person to person; secured by guarantee

11 Reviews

This agreement brings in a third party guarantor as security for the loan.

The borrower and the lender should both be individuals.

Use for loans to family and friends, as well as for arms length business deals.

Loan agreement: individual borrower; secured on financial assets

For a loan secured against assets such as company shares, the right to receive another debt, or intellectual property rights.

Suitable for lending by an individual or a company to an individual or a partnership, for purposes such as:

Loan agreement: company; secured by guarantee

15 Reviews

This is an agreement between a lender, who may be an individual or a corporate body, and a borrower, who is a company or a trust. Security is provided by a personal guarantee of a third party, probably by one or more of the directors.

Example uses include lending:

Loan agreement: company borrower; secured on physical assets; guarantor option

This agreement is between a lender, who may be an individual or a corporate body, and a borrower, who is a company. The loan is secured on specific physical assets. This is not a fixed and floating charge.

Security could be any physical assets, lodged or described, with options for:

Other optional provisions include:

Loan agreement: company; secured on financial instruments

An agreement between an individual or a corporate body, and a company. The loan may be secured on shares, intellectual property rights or other intangible property.

This agreement strongly protects the lender. If the value of the security falls below a specified level, the lender can call on the borrower to top it up.

Optional provisions include:

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Written in plain English

We avoid legal terminology unless necessary. Plain English makes our documents easy to understand, easy to edit and more likely to be accepted.

Guidance notes included

You don’t need legal knowledge to use our documents. We explain what to edit and how in the guidance notes included at the end of the document.

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Our documents comply with the latest relevant law. Our lawyers regularly review how new law affects each document in our library.

What is a loan agreement?

A loan agreement (sometimes called a loan contract) is a contract between a lender and a borrower whereby the lender agrees to lend a certain amount of money to the borrower.

By making use of a loan agreement, the lender and the borrower can document their arrangement on, amongst other terms:

Basic elements of a simple loan agreement

A simple loan agreement is likely to state:

Why is it important to use a loan agreement?

If there is one contract that should always be in writing, it is a loan agreement.

Regardless of whether you are lending to or from a family member, colleague, or someone you do not know well, it cannot be emphasised enough how important it is to record the loan amount and any conditions of the loan in an agreement.

Borrowing any amount of money is a large commitment and it is important that both the lender and borrower are agreed and clear as to terms of the loan. A written agreement protects both the borrower and the lender.

If you are lending to someone you don't know well, securing the loan against assets that easily can be sold is often a good idea. If the borrower fails to repay the capital or the interest of the loan, the lender may acquire the assets submitted as security and sell them off to realise the loan amount.

If you are lending to someone in your family or a friend you can use the unsecured loan agreement or the family members and friends loan agreement. The reason to have a loan agreement when lending to family or friends might be to keep your relationship strong rather than to be a contract you want to enforce.

Once a lender agrees and the parties sign a loan agreement, the lender cannot renege and refuse to lend the borrower the sum agreed on the terms set out in the loan agreement.

Why use our loan agreement templates?

All these loan agreement templates are drawn outside the National Consumer Credit Protection Act 2009 and do not comply with the requirements of the National Credit Code.

Whilst that makes them unsuitable for commercial lenders in the business of lending or providing credit, for private lending and personal loans they are very flexible, allowing you to make, more or less, the deal you choose.

Our loan agreement templates are strong in law, favour the lender, and cover a large range of possible transactions.

We have provided many options in most of our loan agreement templates and written them in plain English. This makes our legal documents easy to understand and edit any commercial terms according to your preference.

Suitable for all forms of private lending

Our loan contract templates can be used by any person or organisation (companies, business partnerships, and LLPs) for all forms of private lending.

Use these agreements:

Which loan agreement template should you use?

Loan agreement for use if your borrower is an individual person

For a very simple loan agreement that has no guarantor and no security, you should use the unsecured loan agreement: person to person; private or business.

For a personal loan to a member of your immediate family, a friend, or a relative, use the personal loan agreement template for lending to friends and family.

If you want to include a guarantor (which could be a life partner, parent, or a relative) to guard against non-payment, you should use the person to person loan agreement secured by guarantee.

If you are an individual or a company lender and your borrower promises and agrees to pledge his or her shares, other financial assets or intellectual property as security. Maybe he wants to borrow money to use for his company but you are only willing to lend money to him personally. In this case, you should use the loan agreement for individual borrower that is secured on financial assets.

In other cases, your borrower might be a private individual who wants to borrow money to buy a university education or stock for his business and gives security over his physical assets. In such a case, you should use the loan agreement for a private borrower secured on physical assets.

Loan agreements for use if your borrower is a limited company

If your borrower is a company, you should use a secured loan agreement. Further, you need to provide for authority to enter into the deal, promise not to change the structure or other matters related to company law. These terms are already provided in our loan agreement templates.

If the borrower is a company, you should use the loan agreement for loan to company where the directors personally guarantee repayment of the loan.

In other cases, you may want provisions for security provided by financial instruments or other intellectual property. The security should be shares or some other property that can be sold easily. In this case, you should use a loan agreement for loan to company that is secured on financial instruments.

Conversely, you may want the company borrower to secure the loan against physical assets of the company (something that is not 'fixed to the land'). For these types of loans, you should use loan agreement for company borrower that is secured on physical assets and preferably include a guarantor.

The terms in these lending agreements

Each loan agreement template is drawn for circumstances that differ slightly from the others, so the terms in each vary. But be assured -we provide extensive guidance notes with every loan contract that explain each paragraph in the contract in detail. Our loan agreement templates include, amongst others, the following terms:

Guarantors

Almost all the loan agreement templates provide for guarantors – even if the loan amount is secured against other assets as well.

In most cases, a guarantee is much more effective than other types of security because non-repayment risks a relationship and the reputation of the guarantor as well as of the borrower. Even if the borrower's credit history is impeccable, a guarantor could be brought in.

Additionally, in most situations, the lender only needs to satisfy themself that the guarantor has sufficient assets overall and passes a credit check, and therefore doesn’t have to perform detailed valuations of individual items offered as security.

We strongly advise that you insist on a guarantor when you lend to a company. The guarantor should be one or more directors of the company. Remember that a guarantee is far more effective if it includes the spouse or life partner of a director.

Guarantors should be reminded to read the entire loan agreement carefully, and not just the provisions relating to their guarantee.

Term (duration)

The time period during which the amount is lent can be any you choose. There are no legal consequences if the term is long or short: no notices, no special registrations.

We suggest that the repayment period is a specific time period, such as one year, rather than conditional on another event, such as a student loan application being accepted. The problem with a conditional event is that even if it is certain to happen, the two parties may not have the same expectations as to the timing at the outset. As obvious as it sounds, a fixed term loan is certain to meet the timing criteria to be repaid.

Interest rate

There is no limit in law on the interest rate or the total interest amount that the lender may charge. It can be whatever the two parties agree. It could be fixed for the duration, or variable from one time period to another depending on another factor (such as a bank rate). It could be reduced for prompt payment.

In our loan agreement templates we have optionally provided for a greater rate of interest if the debtor falls behind with regular repayments. That is done very carefully so as to avoid it being treated as a “penalty” - not allowed in Australian law.

Interest could be accrued and paid at the end of the term, or it could be payable in regular payments (e.g. monthly). Deferment is more common if the sum borrowed is to be spent on a project that realises a large return at the end of the term, and the principal and interest are paid together.

Loan repayment options

Our loan agreement templates provide option that the borrower repay the loan in a staggered approach.

We allow optionally for a repayment schedule to be used.

The lender is given strong protection

All our loan agreement templates provide strong protection for the person or party lending the money. This applies more to those documents where the reason for lending is a business one rather than to help family or friends. We take the simple view that since the money is not a gift, everyone expects it to be repaid.

If you are lending to someone close to you it is unlikely that you will want to bankrupt them if the borrower fails to make a repayment. However, in a business deal, remember that if the business goes down, a dispute as to entitlement is more likely to be against a liquidator or receiver than against the shareholder-director who took on the debt. That is why we make the terms of these lending agreements so strong.

Assets as security

In a secured loan, the borrower promises to put up a property or assets as collateral. So if the borrower defaults, the lender's position is secured as he can use the collateral to realise the outstanding loan amount.

Physical goods can provide sound security because the lender should be able to acquire them and sell them easily if the borrower defaults. Of course, goods that can be removed easily provide better collateral than those that require specialist equipment to move them.

In these loan agreement templates, the sum lent can be secured either by taking physical possession of the assets at the outset, or by leaving them in place and describing them in detail in the agreement. The loan agreement provides the evidence that the item is secured.

What is a Division 7A loan agreement?

A Division 7A loan agreement is one where the loan qualifies under the Income Tax Assessment Act as a loan, and not a payment of dividends to the recipient.

If the loan were instead treated under Div 7A as a dividend payment, then income tax would be assessable on it.

Division 7A prevents companies from distributing money to their shareholders and shareholders' associates under the guise of a loan, in order to avoid the person from paying income tax on that amount.

To qualify as a loan, the payment generally must either:

There is no specific template for a Div 7A loan. Instead, if the lender is a company and the loan is being made to a shareholder or close associate, then you should ensure that the terms and conditions of the loan are comparable to other loans that might be made by a commercial lender.

Lending to a company requires registration of the charge

If a company borrows an amount of money against security, then registration of the charge at Australian Securities and Investment Commission is required, if the lender wants to be given preference over unsecured creditors.

The Personal Property Securities Act 2009 ('PPS Act') commenced in Australia on 30 January 2012 and established a new system for the registration of security interests in personal property. Prior to personal security reforms, the charges were registered on the Australian Securities and Investment Commission ('ASIC') Register of Company Charges. Registration and the relative priority of these interests were governed by the Corporations Act 2001.

The Australian PPS Act establishes the Personal Property Securities Register ('the PPS Register'). This register is a single, national register which replaces numerous State, Territory and Commonwealth electronic and paper registers. A personal property security is where a secured party takes an interest in personal property as security for a loan or other obligation, or enters into a transaction that involves the supply of secured finance.

The PPS Act generally requires the registration of security interests in order for priority to be maximised. As a simple example, a registered security interest will have priority over an unregistered security interest despite being created after the unregistered security interest.

Note: We repeat our document templates are drawn outside the National Consumer Credit Protection Act 2009, these are not suitable for companies in the business of lending or providing credit to consumers.

Check authority to enter into a loan agreement

If either party is a company or if the loan is made intercompany, then you should check in advance whether the directors as a whole have authority to bind the company to the contract, and if they do, which directors may sign on behalf of the company.

You may need two authorised signatories (likely to be two directors or a single director plus a company secretary). For a company with a sole director, or many where a director is a majority shareholder, the signature of that one person may be sufficient.