Business Loans for Professional Practices

Does your law firm need a loan?

law firm loan

Why do lawyers need loans? The reasons are many and varied, so it may be worth reviewing how solicitors typically fund the legal services they offer.

Funding

In many respects – whether your firm is structured as a partnership or a limited liability company and whether you are established in the city or running a rural practice – a firm of solicitors operates like many another business.

Set up and working capital is likely to be raised from contributions from individual partners or the issue of shares by a company and revenue is generated from fees through the provision of services to clients.

In the case of a firm of solicitors, however, there are likely to be a number of different fee structures that may be employed and much of the work might involve clients in receipt of legal aid. Some of the implications – for both clients and solicitors alike – are explained by the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA).

The range of potential charging structures, may make income streams more difficult for solicitors than other businesses to budget and manage.

Borrowing

Like many another business, a firm of solicitors may need access to additional working capital – to invest in premises, equipment, and information technology systems in order to keep the firm competitive in a fast-moving world, so that, at the very least, it keeps up with rivals and, if possible, betters them.

Access to that additional funding is likely to be made through borrowing – and there are a number of options:

Loans from partners

Equity loans

Secured loans

Unsecured loans

Just as with any business, therefore, your firm of solicitors may need injections of additional capital from time to time – essential if you are to maintain your competitive edge in an increasingly fast-changing world of legal services.

Although you may have access to longer-term, secured forms of borrowing, a fixed rate unsecured loan may prove a versatile and flexible way of quickly and easily raising additional working capital when it is most needed, without the commitment to long-term repayment terms likely to involve an accumulation of considerable sums in interest.

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