- (562) 614-0378
- hello@measlaw.com
What's the Deal with Personal Guarantees?
Table of Contents
What’s the Deal with Personal Guarantees? Protect the Business Without Pledging Your Life
Quick Sip Takeaways ☕️
- Rule: A personal guarantee makes you pay if your company can’t. Negotiate scope, cap, triggers, and exit before you sign.
- Action: Confirm the type (unlimited, capped, joint‑and‑several, continuing), add limits (dollar cap, time sunset), and request alternatives (deposit, letter of credit, parent guarantee).
- Trade‑off: Lenders and landlords want certainty. You can often give enough security without taking unlimited personal risk.
You’re landing a lease, loan, or vendor line. The term sheet looks great, then you spot the personal guarantee. Gulp. Deep breath. ☕ Simple rule: say what you’re guaranteeing, how much, for how long, and what turns it on. If any of those are foggy, don’t sign yet.
Tip 1: Identify the kind of guarantee before you negotiate the terms
- Do: Ask for the form up front and label the type in plain English.
- Compare:
- Unlimited vs capped (e.g., “up to $100k”).
- Joint and several (you’re each on the hook for the full amount) vs several (only your share).
- Continuing (covers future advances or extensions) vs one‑time (covers a single deal).
- Check: Are there “bad‑act” or “springing” triggers (fraud, waste, unauthorized transfers) that activate full liability?
- Ask: What exactly is guaranteed—rent only, principal only, or all obligations (fees, interest, attorney fees)?
Bottom line: Name the type and you’ll see where to push.
Legal Barista’s Tip (action): Paste‑ready line →
“Please send the guarantee form and confirm: type, cap amount, obligations covered, and whether it’s continuing or one‑time.”
Tip 2: Limit your exposure with caps, sunsets, and clean triggers
- Do: Propose a dollar cap or a step‑down cap after on‑time payments.
- Time: Add a sunset (for example, guarantee expires after 12 on‑time months or at renewal).
- Scope: Limit to specific obligations (e.g., base rent only, or principal balance only).
- Triggers: Tie liability to nonpayment or listed bad acts. Avoid vague “any breach.”
- Process: Require notice and a cure window before demand, and limit add‑on fees to reasonable, documented amounts.
- Exit: Ask for release on assignment or after a replacement guarantor, deposit, or letter of credit is posted.
Negotiation Checklist
◻ Cap: dollar cap or step‑down
◻ Time: sunset after on‑time period
◻ Scope: rent/principal only vs “all obligations”
◻ Triggers: nonpayment or defined bad acts
◻ Notice & Cure: days to fix before demand
◻ Release: on assignment or replacement security
Bottom line: Most risk comes from no cap, no end date, and fuzzy triggers. Fix those three first.
Legal Barista’s Tip (action): Paste‑ready clause concept →
“Guarantor’s liability is capped at $_____, applies only to unpaid base rent (excludes consequential damages), requires 10‑day notice and cure, and expires after 12 consecutive on‑time months.”
Tip 3: Offer smarter security if they won’t budge
- Do: Trade an unlimited guarantee for a larger deposit or a letter of credit that burns down over time.
- Compare: Parent/affiliate guarantee (strong balance sheet) or a limited “good‑guy” style guarantee that covers rent through surrender and proper move‑out conditions.
- Target: Limit a guarantee to the first year, or to make‑good amounts after a specific event.
- Ask: Can we swap to a performance bond or a specific‑asset lien for project‑based work instead of a full personal backstop?
Bottom line: There’s more than one way to give comfort without handing over the keys to your house.
One‑Question Save: “If we add a three‑month deposit or LOC, can we cap the guarantee at $75k and sunset it after 12 on‑time months?”
Legal Barista’s Tip (action): Paste‑ready email opener →
“Open to additional security (deposit/LOC). In exchange, let’s cap the guarantee, add a 12‑month sunset, and limit coverage to base obligations only.”
Key Takeaways
- A personal guarantee is you promising to pay. Treat it like a big deal.
- Type + Cap + Time + Triggers decide your real risk.
- If they need security, use caps, sunsets, and alternatives to keep it fair.
Ready to talk it through? Book a free 15‑minute Discovery Espresso with fractional counsel.
Not ready yet? Comment GUARANTEE and we’ll DM the 1‑page Personal Guarantee Negotiation Checklist. ✅
Disclaimer: Educational only; not legal advice; no attorney–client relationship; attorney advertising. Guarantees usually must be in a signed writing to be enforceable; terms and enforceability vary by state. Confirm specifics with counsel for your deal.