Farm shops trading as UK limited companies or LLPs can apply for business finance with Credicorp. The model combines food retail, hospitality, seasonal agriculture and often events or accommodation, creating a cashflow profile that benefits from flexible short-term funding rather than long-term debt.
What do farm shops use finance for?
- Chilled display and walk-in cold rooms
- Point-of-sale systems, stock management software and card terminals
- Butchery equipment, deli counters and prep kitchen fit-outs
- Stocking up ahead of Christmas, Easter or summer peak periods
- Expanding the car park, adding seating or upgrading a café area
- Buying in local produce from neighbouring farms at volume for resale
How Credicorp products align to farm-shop cycles
Seasonal demand means cashflow swings sharply. Credicorp Flex — a revolving credit facility — is well suited here: draw funds ahead of the Christmas stock build, repay as takings come in, and keep the line available for the next peak. For a defined capital project — a new cold room or café extension — a Credicorp Business Loan provides a lump sum over a fixed short term. For a single large supplier invoice, Credicorp Slice spreads payment over three or four weekly instalments at a flat 6% fee.
Points to consider
- Planning permission for extensions or new structures adds lead time — finance the build, not the planning process
- Food hygiene ratings and EHO visits affect trade; keep compliance spend planned rather than reactive
- Rural broadband and EPOS reliability matter for online ordering — technology spend is a legitimate capital use
We lend only to UK limited companies and LLPs, and the loan is to the company with no director personal guarantee. As business finance outside the consumer-credit regime, it is not covered by the Financial Ombudsman Service or FSCS.
See also: Can a market gardening business get short-term finance?, Business finance for artisan and craft bakeries.