In small businesses, money often moves faster than paperwork. A transfer to cover VAT, a loan from the director to bridge a slow-paying client, an advance to a related company. On the bank statement it looks practical and harmless. In reality, every one of those movements affects cash flow, risk, and trust. That is why every company loan must be properly documented, properly secured, and clear about its purpose.
A proper loan agreement does not exist to satisfy lawyers. It exists to explain reality in plain terms. Who lends, who borrows, how much, when it will be repaid, and at what interest. Just as important is why the loan exists. Is it meant to cover temporary liquidity, finance an investment, or support a specific project? Without a stated purpose, a loan becomes vague, and vague money is the first thing authorities, banks, or curators distrust.
Security matters just as much. A loan without collateral is not neutral; it is a loan where the risk is undefined. Collateral does not have to be heavy or dramatic. It can be a pledge on receivables, inventory, or other assets, or a clear position in relation to other creditors. What matters is that it is realistic, written down, and fits the purpose of the loan. Money lent to cover a short-term cash gap should not quietly turn into long-term unsecured risk.
Another point often overlooked is that documentation must follow behaviour. Every additional transfer, partial repayment, or change in use of the funds needs to fit the original purpose, or the agreement needs to be updated. A loan drafted years ago does not automatically cover today’s balance if the money has kept moving in different directions.
This documentation becomes crucial the moment something goes wrong. If repayments are delayed, or a dispute arises about what was agreed, a written loan agreement gives you a far stronger position. It turns a discussion of intentions into a discussion of facts. Without it, you are left relying on emails, memories, or explanations after the fact, none of which carry the same weight when pressure is on.
For directors and CEOs, this is not just about recovery of funds, but about responsibility. Dutch law requires an administration that reflects reality. Loans without clear terms, purpose, or security can be reclassified as income, equity, or improper distributions. In those cases, the protection of the company can weaken, and personal liability may come into view.
Good loan documentation is not about distrust or rigidity. It is about resilience. When the purpose, terms, security, and actual money movements tell the same story, the business is better protected—both in calm times and when repayments slow or conversations become more difficult. For small business owners, that kind of clarity is not extra work; it is quiet risk management that pays off precisely when you need it most.