Protection Authority Guide

Business Protection For Property Companies: Debt, Directors And Continuity.

Property companies often protect the buildings and insure the assets, but overlook the business risk behind the portfolio. Debt needs servicing. Directors make decisions. Shareholders control ownership. Key people manage lenders, tenants, contractors, finance and strategy. If a director dies, suffers a serious illness or can no longer contribute, the company may still own property, but its ability to refinance, manage debt, protect income and make decisions can be disrupted. Business protection asks what happens next.

The business behind the portfolio

A property company is not only a collection of assets; it is a business with people, debt and decisions.

A limited company landlord, SPV, development company or property investment business may appear secure because it holds property. But property value does not automatically solve business continuity. Rent must be collected. Mortgages must be paid. Bridging exits must be managed. Development milestones must be delivered. Contractors, agents, tenants, accountants, solicitors and lenders all need communication. The company must continue making decisions even when life changes suddenly.

Business protection for property companies is about asking what happens if the people behind the business are no longer available. If a founder dies, can the company continue? If a director is seriously ill, who speaks to lenders? If a shareholder’s estate inherits shares, who controls the company? If the person who manages refinancing is gone, can the portfolio still meet its obligations? These are practical questions, not theoretical ones.

Finanze Property does not provide insurance, legal, tax or accounting advice directly. Protection enquiries are referred to Insurance-Desk, our preferred insurance partner, who can discuss available protection routes, underwriting, policy terms, exclusions and limitations. Clients should also involve legal, tax and accounting advisers where company ownership, trusts, shareholder agreements, debt or estate planning are involved.

Core point: property protection insures the asset. Business protection looks at the company’s ability to survive, repay, refinance and make decisions if a key person or shareholder is lost.

Debt makes protection more important

The loan does not stop because the director is no longer there.

Property companies are often debt-supported. Buy-to-let mortgages, commercial mortgages, bridging loans, refurbishment facilities, development finance, business loans, tax funding, asset finance and director loans may all sit somewhere in the structure. If the person who arranged, manages or supports that debt dies or becomes seriously ill, the obligations usually continue. The lender still expects payments. The bridge still needs an exit. The project still needs management. The refinance still needs evidence.

Business protection can help a company think about how debt would be handled. This might involve key person protection to provide funds to the company, shareholder protection to manage ownership change, loan protection to help repay specific borrowing, or relevant life cover to support a director’s family. The right route depends on where the money should go and what problem it is intended to solve.

The mistake is assuming one policy solves everything. If the company needs funds to repay debt, a policy designed for family beneficiaries may not help the company. If the shareholders need funds to buy shares, a key person policy may not provide the correct legal mechanism. If the family needs support, company-owned business protection may not deliver the intended personal outcome. Purpose comes first.

Loan repayment

The company may need funds to repay or reduce borrowing if a key director is lost.

Refinance risk

A refinance can become harder if the person with experience, records or lender relationships is no longer available.

Working capital

Funds may be needed to stabilise cashflow, appoint support or manage a period of disruption.

Lender confidence

Directors, experience, guarantees and management continuity can all affect lender comfort.

The three core protection questions

Who should receive the money, what should it solve and what legal structure makes it work?

Business protection planning becomes clearer when the company separates three questions. First, who needs the money? The company, the lender, the family, the remaining shareholders or a trust? Second, what is the money for? Debt repayment, lost profit, recruitment, working capital, share purchase, family support or estate planning? Third, what structure makes that outcome happen? Insurance alone may not be enough without the right ownership, trust, shareholder agreement or tax treatment.

For a property company, these questions are especially important because assets can be illiquid. The company may have valuable properties but insufficient cash. It may not want to sell during a bad market. It may need lender consent to raise new borrowing. A beneficiary may need value from shares but the remaining directors may not have the funds to buy them. A policy can provide liquidity, but only if it is aimed at the correct problem.

  • If the company needs capital, key person or loan-related protection may be relevant.
  • If the family needs personal support, relevant life or personal protection may be relevant.
  • If ownership needs to transfer, shareholder protection and legal agreements may be relevant.
  • If a lender needs comfort, debt and repayment protection questions should be reviewed.
  • If the company depends on one director, continuity planning and delegation are also needed.

Finanze Property helps clients ask these questions in the right order before referral to Insurance-Desk. That makes the protection conversation more focused and avoids mixing several needs into one unclear policy.

Key person risk in property companies

The most valuable person may be the one who knows how the portfolio actually works.

A key person in a property company may not have the biggest salary or the most formal title. They may be the person who sources deals, understands lender criteria, negotiates with valuers, manages contractors, handles tenant issues, keeps finance records together or knows which refinance route will work. If that person is lost, the remaining company may struggle to act quickly even if the properties still exist.

Key person protection can be considered where the company would need funds to deal with that disruption. The money might help recruit a replacement, repay debt, maintain working capital, cover lost profit, bring in external management, support project delivery or give the remaining directors breathing space. The policy purpose should be clear before the amount is chosen.

Insurance-Desk can discuss the available insurance options and underwriting requirements. The company should be ready to explain the key person’s role, the expected financial impact, the amount required and how the proceeds would be used. Tax and accounting advice may also be needed.

Dependency test: if one person disappearing would stop acquisitions, refinancing, development delivery, rent collection or lender communication, the company has a key person risk.

Shareholder and ownership continuity

Ownership uncertainty can damage a company at the exact moment stability is needed.

If a shareholder dies, their shares may pass to an estate or beneficiary. That person may need cash, may not understand the company, may not want to be involved, or may disagree with remaining directors. The company may then face uncertainty around control, dividends, decision-making, sale strategy and refinancing. This can be particularly difficult if the company owns property that cannot be quickly sold or refinanced.

Shareholder protection can help create a planned route for remaining shareholders or the company to buy the affected shareholder’s interest, subject to policy, legal and tax structure. This often requires more than insurance. A cross-option agreement, shareholder agreement, articles review, valuation method, trust structure and tax advice may all be needed.

For property companies, the valuation method should be considered carefully. Asset value, debt, development value, tax, minority interests and liquidity can all affect the practical value of shares. A policy amount chosen years ago may quickly become outdated if the portfolio grows.

Estate risk

Shares may pass to beneficiaries who were never intended to run or influence the company.

Buyout funding

Remaining shareholders may not have the cash to buy shares without insurance proceeds or finance.

Control risk

Decision-making can become uncertain if ownership transfers unexpectedly.

Valuation risk

Cover and agreements should be reviewed as property values, debt and company value change.

Relevant life and director family protection

Family protection should not be confused with company protection, even when the company pays the premium.

Relevant life cover may be considered by directors who want life cover through the company for the benefit of their family or nominated beneficiaries. It can be useful in some circumstances, but it does not usually pay money to the company. That means it should not be relied on to repay company debt, replace a key person’s profit contribution or fund a shareholder buyout unless the structure and purpose have been properly reviewed.

The distinction is important for property companies. A director’s family may need support if the director dies. The company may also need money to deal with mortgages, projects and operating costs. The remaining shareholders may need money to buy shares. These are separate protection needs. Relevant life cover may answer one of them, not all of them.

Trusts, beneficiaries, nomination forms, accountant input and tax treatment are all important. Insurance-Desk can explain the insurance process and relevant limitations. Clients should obtain appropriate tax and legal advice where needed.

Continuity planning beyond insurance

Insurance provides money; it does not automatically provide management, records or decisions.

Business protection works best when it sits alongside practical continuity planning. A payout can help, but the company still needs records, access, authority and decision-making. If only one director knows where the finance documents are, which lender to contact, which contractor is on site or what the refinance plan is, the company may still struggle even with insurance proceeds.

Property companies should maintain clear records: lender details, loan balances, repayment dates, valuation reports, tenancy schedules, insurance policies, company documents, shareholder agreements, director loan accounts, tax records, contractor contracts, planning documents and professional contacts. The remaining directors or trusted advisers should know how to access critical information in an emergency.

The strongest protection plans combine liquidity with governance. Insurance can provide funds, while company records and agreements provide the route for action. Without both, the business may still face uncertainty.

  • Who can speak to lenders if a director dies or becomes seriously ill?
  • Who has access to finance records, passwords, valuations and legal documents?
  • Are shareholder agreements, articles and trusts up to date?
  • Is there a schedule of all debts, guarantees, properties and insurance policies?
  • Are professional advisers documented and contactable?
  • Does the company know which policies pay to whom and for what purpose?

Information to prepare

A serious protection review starts with the company structure, debt schedule and people map.

Before speaking with Insurance-Desk, a property company should gather enough information to show how the business is structured and where the risks sit. The aim is not to make the client an insurance expert. It is to make sure the protection conversation is based on accurate facts rather than broad assumptions.

  • Company structure, SPVs, shareholders, directors and share percentages.
  • Property schedule, values, rents, tenants, lenders and loan balances.
  • Current debt facilities, guarantees, debentures, repayment dates and refinance plans.
  • Director roles, key person dependencies and who manages lenders, tenants and contractors.
  • Existing personal, key person, shareholder, relevant life or loan protection policies.
  • Shareholder agreement, articles, cross-option agreements or buy-sell terms.
  • Director loan accounts, family succession concerns and estate-planning considerations.
  • Accountant, solicitor, tax adviser and other professional contacts.

This information helps separate the protection needs. The company may need funds. The family may need funds. Shareholders may need buyout funding. Lenders may need reassurance. Each outcome should be planned deliberately.

Common mistakes

Business protection becomes weak when the company insures one risk and assumes every other risk is covered.

The most common mistake is buying a policy without defining the purpose. A company may arrange life cover, but no one knows whether the benefit is intended for the family, the company, debt repayment or a shareholder buyout. Another mistake is failing to align policies with legal agreements. A shareholder protection policy without a buy-sell mechanism can still leave uncertainty. A key person policy without a continuity plan can provide cash but no direction.

No clear purpose

The policy exists, but no one can explain who should receive the money or what it should solve.

Wrong recipient

Money goes to beneficiaries when the company needed funds, or to the company when the family needed support.

No legal alignment

Insurance, shareholder agreements, articles and trusts do not work together.

No annual review

Property values, debt, shareholders and company roles change but the protection plan is not updated.

A stronger approach is to map the company, debt, people and ownership first. Then decide which risks should be insured, which require legal documents, which require tax advice and which require practical continuity planning.

Why work with Finanze Property

We help property companies connect finance, ownership and protection properly.

Finanze Property helps property investors and companies think about protection in the context of borrowing, refinancing, rental income, business finance, shareholders, directors and continuity. We do not provide insurance, legal, tax or accounting advice directly. Where a client wants to review business protection, key person protection, shareholder protection, relevant life cover or wider insurance needs, we refer the enquiry to Insurance-Desk, our preferred insurance partner.

This matters because property companies often become more complex over time. A single SPV can become a portfolio. A simple mortgage can become several facilities. A founder-led business can become dependent on one or two individuals. Shareholders can change, families can grow, debt can increase and refinancing can become more sophisticated. Protection should evolve with that structure.

For directors and shareholders, the objective is not to insure every possible event. It is to understand the critical risks and decide which need funded, documented protection. Finanze Property helps clients start that review with the finance and ownership reality in mind.

What to send us: company structure, property schedule, debt schedule, shareholder details, director roles, current policies, lender obligations, guarantees, shareholder agreement and any concerns around continuity, family support or ownership transfer. We can refer the enquiry to Insurance-Desk for specialist support.

Need to review business protection for a property company?

If your company has property assets, debt, shareholders or key directors, the protection review should go beyond buildings cover. Finanze Property can help identify the questions and refer your enquiry to Insurance-Desk for specialist support.

Finanze Property is a trading style of Finanze Ltd, which is authorised and Regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority and is entered on the Financial Services Register (https://register.fca.org.uk/s/) under reference 990498.

The information contained within this website is subject to the UK regulatory regime and is therefore targeted at corporate consumers based in the UK.

Not all services we offer are covered by the FCA. The FCA does not regulate some forms of Business Buy to Let Mortgages and Commercial Mortgages to Limited Companies.

Your property may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage.

There will be a fee for loan research and processing, the precise amount will depend upon your circumstances. Your Consultant will confirm the amount before you choose to proceed but we estimate it to be a minimum of 1% of the gross loan value for standard transactions and 1.5% for specialist transactions.

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This article is general information only. Protection and insurance products are subject to eligibility, underwriting, policy terms, limits and exclusions. Insurance-Desk will explain key exclusions and limitations before you proceed. You should not rely on this article as personal insurance, financial, legal, accounting or tax advice.

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