The risk to the lender with this loan type is huge. If the borrower defaults on the payments, there is no real way of recovering the money. The court is always an option though. There is the alternative of a Charging Order i.e., if the court rules in favour of the lender the borrower has to put up an asset against the unpaid loan. That asset can be sold off to recoup the unpaid amount.
Still, borrowers deem putting personal property as collateral a more hazardous exercise than procuring unsecured loan. These loans can also be processed faster. The principal reason for this being that unsecured loans do not necessitate needless documentation that secured loans warrant. Property valuation is missing with this type of a loan.
Unsecured loans can be availed through many sources. Banks, building societies, private lenders and the Internet provide unsecured loans. The first two have been established since long in the market. They are the conventional sources of availing loans. Private lenders are newer, a fashion borne of diverse borrower needs. The online option is perhaps the best in terms of choice. Also, with the Internet comes expediency, an invaluable customer requisite.
In spite of the surfeit of that one gets to see in the UK market, discretion is foremost before availing a loan. Some lenders are there simply to make a fast pound. A gullible borrower may procure a seemingly “cheap" loan that is laced with hidden charges. This way, he will be repaying a fortune. The only way to circumvent this is proper research.