In this blog, we outline funding options for London-based small businesses and help you understand whether these are right for your business needs.
What is faith‑based lending?
Faith-based lending is a type of financing specifically tailored to support business growth and align with personal or religious views.
There are three core principles central to faith-based lending:
Fairness.
Shared risk.
Ethical use of funds.
These principles are shared across Islamic finance, Jewish Halacha-compliant lending and Christian microfinance models.
This style of lending is fair because lending practices are equitable, meaning all parties are treated fairly and transparently.
The approach is designed to split risk as lenders and borrowers share profits and losses.
Funding is ethical as it can't be used to support businesses that trade in restricted or forbidden industries like alcohol and gambling.
In short, faith-based lending differs from conventional lending where conventional lenders earn profit through interest on a loan, while faith-based lenders don't earn interest.
Profit is often earned through rent, partnership or resale.
Who is faith-based finance for?
For some founders, conventional finance models, particularly those involving interest, don't feel appropriate or accessible.
Faith-based lending offers alternative structures that prioritise ethical principles, shared risk and transparency.
These alternative structures often feel very meaningful for founders looking for funding which reflects their values.
London has one of the largest Muslim entrepreneurial communities in Europe. For these founders, ethical funding is not a choice, it's a compliance requirement.