What Is a Personal Guarantee and What Are You Really Agreeing To?
Before you sign a personal guarantee on a commercial loan, you need to understand exactly what you're doing. Because a lot of business owners sign them without fully grasping what they've agreed to — and the consequences of that misunderstanding can follow them for years.
Let me break this down clearly and honestly, the way I'd want someone to explain it to me.
The Basic Definition
A personal guarantee is a legal agreement in which you, as an individual, promise to repay a business debt if the business cannot. When you sign a personal guarantee, the lender can pursue you personally — not just the business — for repayment if the loan defaults.
Without a personal guarantee, a lender's only remedy in a default scenario is the collateral: they can foreclose on the property, repossess the equipment, or take possession of the receivables. They cannot come after your personal bank accounts, your home (in many states), or your personal investment accounts.
With a personal guarantee, those restrictions are lifted. The lender can pursue all of those personal assets in addition to the business collateral.
This is a real and significant commitment. It should never be signed without understanding.
Why Lenders Require Personal Guarantees
From a lender's perspective, personal guarantees serve a crucial function: they align your personal incentives with the loan's performance.
When you personally guarantee a business loan, you have skin in the game that goes beyond the business. If the business fails and the collateral is liquidated, you still owe the balance. This incentive structure means you're more likely to fight for the business, manage it carefully, and make tough decisions to protect the loan performance — because the loan performance affects you personally.
For small and mid-sized businesses, lenders know that the business and the owner are financially and operationally inseparable. The owner's judgment, work ethic, and decisions are the primary determinants of the business's success. The personal guarantee is the lender's way of ensuring the owner stays fully committed.
Types of Personal Guarantees
Not all personal guarantees are the same. Understanding the type you're being asked to sign is important.
Full Personal Guarantee (Unlimited): The most common type. You personally guarantee the full outstanding balance of the loan, with no limit. If the loan balance is $2 million at default, your personal liability is up to $2 million (minus whatever the lender recovers from the business collateral).
Limited Personal Guarantee: You guarantee only a specified dollar amount or percentage of the loan. For example, if four partners each sign a limited guarantee for 25% of the loan, each is personally liable for up to 25% of the outstanding balance. Limited guarantees are worth negotiating for larger deals with multiple guarantors.
Joint and Several Guarantee: When multiple owners guarantee a loan jointly and severally, the lender can pursue any one of them for the entire balance — not just their proportional share. If you're one of three partners in a joint and several guarantee and your partners disappear, you could be liable for 100% of the debt. This is standard for multi-owner businesses and is worth understanding.
Continuing Guarantee: Guarantees that extend to cover not just the current loan but any future borrowings under the same facility. Be particularly careful about these — they create ongoing liability beyond the specific transaction you're signing today.
Springing Guarantee: A non-recourse loan where the guarantee "springs" to life if the borrower commits specific bad acts (fraud, waste, unauthorized transfer). I discussed these as "bad boy carveouts" in the context of commercial real estate — this is the individual guarantee version of the same concept.
SBA Personal Guarantees: Non-Negotiable
For SBA loans, personal guarantees are required from all owners with 20% or more ownership interest in the borrowing entity. This is a regulatory requirement, not a lender preference. It cannot be negotiated away.
What this means: if you're applying for an SBA 7(a) or 504 loan and you own 20% or more of the business, you're signing a personal guarantee. Period. If your spouse also has an ownership interest, they may also be required to guarantee.
For many business owners, this is not a deterrent — it's a reasonable ask from a program that provides access to capital they couldn't otherwise access. The SBA guarantee enables lenders to make loans they couldn't otherwise make. The personal guarantee is part of the consideration.
What Happens When a Guaranteed Loan Defaults
Let me walk through what actually happens in a default scenario with a personal guarantee, because the reality is more nuanced than "they take everything."
1. The loan defaults (missed payments, covenant breach, or other triggering event).
2. The lender typically gives a cure period — time to bring the loan current.
3. If not cured, the lender accelerates the loan (demands full repayment immediately).
4. The lender pursues the business collateral first: forecloses on real estate, repossesses equipment, liquidates receivables.
5. If the collateral proceeds don't cover the outstanding balance, the lender seeks a deficiency judgment against the guarantor personally.
6. With a judgment, the lender can pursue garnishment of wages, levying of bank accounts, and liens on personal real estate.
The key word in step 4 is "first." Lenders pursue business collateral before personal assets in most cases — not because they're required to, but because business collateral is usually more valuable and accessible. The personal guarantee is the backstop, not the first line of attack.
However — and this is important — the guarantee means the conversation doesn't end when the collateral is exhausted. If the business property sells for $600,000 and the loan balance is $800,000, the lender has a $200,000 deficiency claim against the guarantor.
When You Can Negotiate a Personal Guarantee
Smaller standard loans (equipment, SBA): almost never negotiable.
Larger commercial real estate loans: sometimes negotiable, particularly for experienced operators with substantial collateral.
Multi-partner situations: limited guarantees are more achievable when multiple creditworthy guarantors are involved.
Mature businesses with strong financials: established businesses with long track records and strong balance sheets sometimes can negotiate guarantee caps or carveouts.
Non-recourse structures (CMBS): available for large, stabilized commercial real estate — essentially an institutional product. No personal guarantee required in most cases, with bad boy carveouts.
The general rule: the stronger your position (better credit, more collateral, more experience, larger deal), the more negotiating room you have on guarantee terms. For most first-time and mid-market commercial borrowers, the personal guarantee is the price of access.
The Access > Cost Framing Applied to Personal Guarantees
Think of a personal guarantee as the cost of access to capital for businesses that can't access it otherwise. For small businesses without the financial history and asset base to justify a non-recourse loan, the personal guarantee is what makes the loan possible.
Yes, it's a risk. It's a real personal liability. But consider the alternative: a business that can't access capital because it won't take the guarantee isn't a business that's protecting its owner — it's a business that's stalling.
I don't recommend signing guarantees carelessly. But I do recommend that business owners understand exactly what they're signing, evaluate whether the business justifies the personal commitment, and sign with clear eyes — rather than avoiding the guarantee entirely and sacrificing access to the capital the business needs.
What I Do for My Clients on This Topic
Before any of my clients sign a commercial loan agreement with a personal guarantee, I make sure they've had the conversation. I'm not their attorney — for significant transactions, you should absolutely have an attorney review the guarantee terms. But I make sure they understand the fundamental nature of what they're agreeing to.
For deals where limited guarantee structures are possible, I work to negotiate them. For deals where the personal guarantee is non-negotiable, I make sure that's clear from the start so there are no surprises.
That's just the right way to operate.
Understand what you're signing before you sign it. For significant transactions, have an attorney review the guarantee terms. And if you have questions about how personal guarantees factor into the specific deal you're evaluating, call me.
John Reynolds Weaver, CEO — W. Reynolds Commercial Capital, Inc.
(325) 440-5820 | john@reynoldscomcap.com | reynoldscomcap.com
Disclaimer
While this article accurately reflects the combined capabilities of all lenders and technology partners with whom W. Reynolds Commercial Capital, LLC has a relationship, not every lender will have all of these capabilities. Not all lenders will have the same services, technology platforms, pricing structures, or program features, and this article in no way guarantees the availability of any specific feature, advance rate, same-day funding, 24/7 portal access, proprietary early-pay software, insurance-backed protection, fuel card integration, or any other service for any individual borrower or transaction.
All financial solutions are subject to credit review, underwriting, due diligence, and final approval by the respective funding partner. Actual terms, conditions, and availability may vary based on the client, invoice quality, industry, collateral, and the policies of the selected lender.
This article is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute a commitment, offer, or guarantee of funding or any particular terms.
For a no-obligation review of your business financing needs and the options currently available through our network, please contact us directly.
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