Yes — independent bookshops trading as UK limited companies or LLPs are eligible for Credicorp business finance. Short-term lending can help a bookshop seize a buying opportunity, fund a café or events extension, or smooth cash flow ahead of a major seasonal push, all without a director personal guarantee.
Cash-flow realities of independent bookselling
Independent booksellers typically hold stock for longer than FMCG retailers, and publisher returns processes can tie up cash for weeks. A Credicorp Flex revolving facility gives the company a credit line to draw against when a buying opportunity or a publisher deal arises, then repay as stock converts to sales. It resets automatically — no new application each time.
One-off investment via Business Loan
A Business Loan is better suited to a defined project: a shopfit, a new events space, accessibility improvements, or a point-of-sale and website upgrade. You borrow a fixed sum and repay over a fixed short term with a clear, predictable schedule. For a one-off large supplier or distributor invoice, Credicorp Slice spreads the cost across three to four weekly payments at a flat 6% fee.
Why some bookshops use revolving credit year-round
- Advance ordering for Christmas — the biggest trading window — requires committing cash months ahead
- Author events and signings may require upfront stock purchases not guaranteed to sell
- Publisher promotional bundles often demand early payment for a better margin
- Café or gift diversification needs working capital before new revenue lines mature
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 convenience store get a business loan with no personal guarantee?, How can a garden centre limited company finance seasonal stock and equipment?