2 min read
Definition
Negative amortisation occurs when the agreed payment does not even cover the interest due, so the shortfall is capitalised and the balance rises. It can arise on deferred-payment structures or when a variable rate climbs above the level a fixed payment was set for. Left unchecked, the debt spirals.
In plain terms
It is the danger zone: you make payments, yet you owe more each month because they do not keep up with the interest.
Why it matters for your company
Watch for negative amortisation if rates rise on a fixed-payment loan — raise the payment or restructure early. See interest capitalisation and how to manage repayments when rates rise.
Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally, and takes no personal guarantee. See indicative terms on business loans, or apply online in minutes.
Related reading

Interest capitalisation
Interest capitalisation adds unpaid interest to the loan principal, so future interest is charged on the…
Read →
Payment holiday interest
Payment holiday interest is the interest that keeps accruing during an agreed break in repayments — a holiday…
Read →
How to manage loan repayments when interest rates rise
When rates climb, act early and deliberately. A rising benchmark lifts variable payments, but a calm, prompt…
Read →
Amortisation
Amortisation is the process of repaying a loan in regular instalments so that the balance reduces to zero by…
Read →Funding for UK limited companies
Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally — short-term working capital with no personal guarantee. See what your business could access.