Scotland Lending Research
Who are the top lenders to Scottish companies in 2026? Aldermore leads ahead of the big banks
Once property-only lenders are excluded, Aldermore Bank is the largest single debenture holder against Scottish companies in 2026, with 333 charges in the first five months of the year. Aldermore and the five high street banks in the list together account for 74.9% of tracked volume, confirming that mainstream banks, not specialist alternative lenders, still dominate general commercial lending in Scotland.
Who leads company lending in Scotland once property lenders are excluded?
Aldermore Bank is the single largest debenture holder in Scotland with 333 charges registered against Scottish companies between January and May 2026, narrowly ahead of Lloyds Bank (312). Together, these two lenders account for 645 charges, 42.4% of the combined top-20 total of 1,520. NatWest (200) and HSBC (151) complete a top four dominated by scale banking relationships rather than specialist finance.
The five high street banks in the list, Lloyds Bank, NatWest, HSBC, Barclays Bank and Santander, hold 805 charges between them, 53.0% of tracked volume. Add Aldermore, and the combined share rises to 1,138 charges, 74.9% of the market, supporting the view that once pure property lenders are stripped out, general commercial lending in Scotland is concentrated among Aldermore and the mainstream banks rather than spread across alternative or specialist providers.
Alternative and invoice finance specialists, Shawbrook Bank, Bizcap, Bibby Finance and eCapital Commercial Finance, hold a combined 144 charges (9.5%), led by Shawbrook (94). A further 238 charges (15.7%) sit with a long tail of smaller banks and mutuals, including Virgin Money, Allica Bank and Handelsbanken, each holding relatively modest but present positions in the Scottish market.
Key insights
- Aldermore Bank leads with 333 charges (21.9% of tracked volume), the single largest holder in Scotland, ahead of Lloyds Bank (312, 20.5%).
- The five high street banks (Lloyds, NatWest, HSBC, Barclays, Santander) hold 805 charges combined, 53.0% of the market.
- Aldermore plus the five high street banks together account for 1,138 charges, 74.9% of the top-20 total.
- Alternative and invoice finance specialists (Shawbrook, Bizcap, Bibby Finance, eCapital) hold a combined 144 charges (9.5%), led by Shawbrook Bank (94).
- Other banks and mutuals, including Virgin Money, Allica Bank and Handelsbanken, together hold 238 charges (15.7%), with Virgin Money the largest at 62.
- The top 2 lenders alone (Aldermore and Lloyds) account for 42.4% of the total tracked volume of 1,520 charges.
Top 20 lenders to Scottish companies, January to May 2026
Top 20 debenture holders (excluding property-only specialist lenders) by number of charges registered against Scottish companies, cumulative January to May 2026, with Spark Intel analyst notes.| Rank | Lender | Charges YTD 2026 | Analyst note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Aldermore Bank | 333 | Largest holder in Scotland, reflecting its broad SME, specialist mortgage and asset finance book. |
| 2 | Lloyds Bank | 312 | Largest high street bank in the market, consistent with its scale across UK business banking. |
| 3 | NatWest | 200 | Second-largest high street bank, maintaining a substantial SME lending footprint in Scotland. |
| 4 | HSBC | 151 | Solid mainstream presence, though behind Lloyds and NatWest in Scottish charge volume. |
| 5 | Barclays Bank | 115 | Smallest of the big four banks by charge volume in Scotland despite its UK-wide scale. |
| 6 | Shawbrook Bank | 94 | Leading specialist challenger bank in the market, reflecting demand for SME and asset-backed finance. |
| 7 | Virgin Money | 62 | Meaningful regional presence, drawing on its Clydesdale Bank heritage and Scottish branch network. |
| 8 | Allica Bank | 51 | Growing SME-focused challenger building share among established Scottish businesses. |
| 9 | Santander | 27 | Modest presence relative to its UK-wide scale, suggesting limited SME lending focus in Scotland. |
| 10 | Bizcap | 23 | Alternative finance provider gaining traction among smaller Scottish businesses needing fast funding. |
| 11 | Handelsbanken | 18 | Relationship-led bank with a small but consistent branch-based presence in Scotland. |
| 12 | Cumberland Building Society | 17 | Regional mutual with a modest cross-border footprint from Cumbria into Scotland. |
| 13 | Atom Bank | 17 | Digital-only challenger building a small SME lending book in the region. |
| 14 | Close Brothers | 17 | Established asset-based lender with a steady, if modest, Scottish presence. |
| 15 | Unity Trust Bank | 16 | Ethically-focused bank serving charities, social enterprises and SMEs in Scotland. |
| 16 | Oxbury Bank | 16 | Agriculture-focused specialist bank, reflecting Scotland's rural and farming economy. |
| 17 | Hampden & Co | 14 | Edinburgh-headquartered private bank, with a naturally concentrated Scottish client base. |
| 18 | Bibby Finance | 14 | Invoice finance specialist with a modest but present Scottish book. |
| 19 | eCapital Commercial Finance | 13 | Growing invoice finance provider extending its reach into the Scottish market. |
| 20 | Oaknorth | 10 | Specialist SME lender with the smallest presence among the top 20 in Scotland. |
| Top 20 total | 1,520 | - | - |
| Category | Charges YTD 2026 | Share of top-20 total |
|---|---|---|
| Aldermore Bank | 333 | 21.9% |
| High street banks (Lloyds, NatWest, HSBC, Barclays, Santander) | 805 | 53.0% |
| Other banks and mutuals | 238 | 15.7% |
| Alternative and IF specialists (Shawbrook, Bizcap, Bibby, eCapital) | 144 | 9.5% |
| Total | 1,520 | 100.0% |
What this means
Once property-only specialist lenders are removed from the picture, Scotland's company lending market looks very different to the UK-wide pattern, where specialist mortgage and BTL lenders dominate. In Scotland, general commercial lending remains concentrated among Aldermore and the mainstream high street banks, which together account for three-quarters of tracked volume. This suggests that alternative and challenger lenders, while present, have yet to build the scale in Scotland that they have achieved in other parts of the UK invoice finance and SME lending markets. For lenders and brokers, this points to continued relationship-banking dominance in Scotland, with room for specialist and alternative providers to grow share if they can replicate their success elsewhere in the UK.
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