2 min read
Definition
Serviceability is whether a business generates enough regular cash to "service" its debt — to meet the repayments as they fall due, with a cushion. It is the practical question behind affordability and is measured through cover ratios like the DSCR.
Why it matters
A loan can be within your credit limit yet still not serviceable if the cash is not there. Serviceability, not the headline amount, is what keeps repayments met. See loan affordability and checking affordability.
Related reading

Affordability (lending)
A lender's assessment of whether a business can comfortably repay a loan from its cash flow — the central…
Read →
Debt service coverage ratio
The debt service coverage ratio (DSCR) measures whether a business generates enough cash to cover its debt…
Read →
Business loan affordability: what lenders check and how to pass
Affordability is the single biggest thing standing between your company and a yes. A lender is not asking…
Read →
How to check if your business can afford a loan
Before you apply for a loan, spend twenty minutes checking whether your business can comfortably afford it…
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.