Before you turn a loan guarantor understand the financial liabilities you will incur

Has your best friend decided to take a bank loan and asked you to be a guarantor? Before you feel weighed down by obligation and agree to become one, consider the consequences. For, according to a ruling passed by the Supreme Court in May this year, if a debtor defaults, it is the guarantor’s responsibility to repay the entire loan. The Supreme Court court ruling was passed on a case filed by one Ganga Kishun of Uttar Pradesh, who had stood guarantor for a loan taken by his friend, Ganga Prasad, who died without clearing the loan. The Supreme Court held Kishun liable to pay Prasad’s dues as he had been the guarantor for the loan.

So if you don’t want to land in a problem, it is important to double-check the borrower’s financial record and repayment ability. Here are the other things you should consider before you agree to turn a guarantor.

The responsibility of repaying the debt doesn’t automatically fall to the heirs. It’s the guarantor’s obligation to pay if the debtor defaults or dies. “Before you take the onerous responsibility of being a guarantor, you must check the credit score of the borrower and ensure that he is creditworthy,” says Suresh Surana, founder, RSM Astute Consulting Group. You should also ensure that you have the financial wherewithal to shoulder the additional liability that will come in case the debtor defaults.

The bank will not immediately begin to pester you the first time a borrower is unable to pay an EMI. It will first send him a notice. If the debtor continues to default on three payments, the bank will send him a registered notice. It will send a legal notice to the debtor and the guarantor only after the borrower does not pay the EMI for more than four months. Depending on the terms and conditions of the agreement, the bank may initiate legal proceedings against the debtor and guarantor simultaneously, or independently.

How it impacts you

 

Many people agree to become loan guarantors believing that their responsibility is limited to ensuring that the debtor pays his EMIs on time. However, a guarantor is not only bound to pay the loan amount if the debtor defaults, but the transaction could impact his credit score and loan eligibility too.

If the borrower defaults, it will negatively affect your credit score. “This is because as a guarantor you are as liable to pay the loan amount as the debtor,” says Mohan. A bad credit score could make it difficult for you to borrow when you want to take a loan yourself. This is because the lender will determine your borrowing capacity only after taking into account the loan for which you are a guarantor. “This doesn’t mean that you will not be given a loan at all, but banks will definitely be cautious while assessing your repayment capacity,” says Madan Mohan, credit counsellor, Disha Counselling Centre.

This is why experts advise that if you do need to be a guarantor, agree for loans with shorter tenures instead of long-term ones such as home loans. Not only will your responsibility end sooner, but the loan value will also be usually lower in a short-term loan than in a long-term one.

The only exception to this rule is if you need to guarantee a home loan. This is because if there is a default, the lender can always recover its dues by selling the asset. However, in cases where there is no asset as in the case of an education loan, the bank will force you as the guarantor to repay the loan in case of a default, and if you are unable to pay the EMI, it is entitled to recover the dues from your estate. This is why banks ask guarantors for a collateral too.

Know your liability

You cannot choose to limit your liability as a guarantor. The sole purpose of getting a guarantor for a loan is to ensure that the bank doesn’t lose its money in case of a default by the debtor. In fact, if you are willing to pay the EMI, you won’t even be able to ask the lender to tweak it in terms of the interest rate or tenure. So, do not go by the creditworthiness of the debtor alone. Check your own financial capability before signing on the dotted line. Take into account your own financial goals to see if you will require a loan in the future.

One way to lessen your burden is to ask the borrower to get another guarantor. Of course, if a default occurs, you will have to pay, but in this case, the EMI could be split between the two guarantors.

Another way to protect yourself is to insist that if the borrower has taken a long-term loan, he should take a loan payment insurance. So, if the borrower dies, the insurance could be used to pay the loan.

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