Debt restructuring means modifying the terms of your existing loans—without taking on new debt. Instead of defaulting or declaring bankruptcy, you work directly with your current lenders to make the debt more manageable.
The key difference: You're not getting a new loan (like consolidation) or reducing the amount owed (like settlement). You're changing the terms of what you already have.
What Is Debt Restructuring?
Debt restructuring can include:
Common Restructuring Options
- Lower interest rate: Reduce APR to decrease monthly payment and total interest
- Extended term: Stretch repayment over longer period (lower monthly payment)
- Reduced monthly payment: Temporarily or permanently lower payment amount
- Interest-only period: Pay only interest for 6-24 months
- Payment deferral: Skip payments for 3-6 months, added to end of loan
- Principal reduction: Rare, but some lenders will reduce amount owed
- Balloon payment extension: Push balloon payment out several years
- Convert variable to fixed rate: Stabilize payments
Restructuring vs. Other Options
| Solution | What Changes | Credit Impact | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Restructuring | Loan terms (rate, payment, term) | Minimal (if current on payments) | Temporary hardship, good relationship with lender |
| Consolidation | New loan pays off old loans | Minimal (new inquiry) | Good credit, multiple debts, qualify for better terms |
| Settlement | Amount owed (pay less) | Severe (7 years) | Can't afford payments, willing to default |
| Bankruptcy | All debts restructured or discharged | Most severe (7-10 years) | Overwhelming debt, need legal protection |
When Lenders Will Restructure
Lenders restructure when it benefits them more than the alternatives. They'll consider it when:
You Have Leverage
- Documented hardship: Revenue decline, unexpected expense, market conditions
- Good payment history: You've been current until recently
- Business is viable: Just needs temporary relief
- Bankruptcy is alternative: They'd rather restructure than get nothing in bankruptcy
- Collateral has limited value: They can't recover much through repossession
Math Makes Sense for Lender
- Modified payments = more total recovery than default/bankruptcy
- Avoiding foreclosure/repossession costs
- Maintaining performing loan (vs. non-performing asset)
- Preserving relationship with borrower
How to Request Debt Restructuring
Step 1: Assess Your Situation
- Calculate current monthly debt payments
- Determine what you can afford (realistically)
- Understand why you're struggling (temporary vs. permanent)
- Prepare financial documentation (P&L, bank statements)
Step 2: Prepare Your Hardship Case
Lenders need to understand WHY you need restructuring. Document:
- What happened: Revenue decline, major expense, industry downturn, key client loss
- Current situation: Monthly income, expenses, cash flow
- What you need: Specific modification request (lower payment, extended term, etc.)
- Your plan: How you'll return to financial stability
Step 3: Contact Lender
Call the Right Department:
- Ask for "Loan Servicing" or "Hardship Department"
- Explain you're experiencing hardship and want to discuss modification
- Don't wait until you're already behind—act early
What to Say:
"I'm calling about loan #[ACCOUNT]. My business has experienced a [revenue decline/unexpected expense] due to [specific reason]. I want to keep this account in good standing, but I'm struggling to make the current payment. I'd like to discuss modifying the loan terms to make it more manageable. Can you help me with that?"
Step 4: Submit Formal Request
Most lenders require written hardship request. Include:
- Hardship letter (explain situation, request specific modification)
- Recent financial statements (P&L, balance sheet)
- Bank statements (3-6 months)
- Tax returns (last 2 years)
- Cash flow projection (showing how modified terms will work)
Step 5: Negotiate Terms
Lender will review and make counter-offer. Common negotiations:
- You request: 3% interest rate reduction
- They counter: 1% reduction for 12 months, then review
- You negotiate: 2% reduction for 24 months
Get Everything in Writing:
- Modified interest rate
- New payment amount
- New term length
- Any fees associated with modification
- Whether it affects your credit reporting
Types of Restructuring by Loan Type
SBA Loans
Options:
- Deferment (up to 6 months)
- Extended maturity date
- Temporary payment reduction
- If in default: Offer in Compromise
Process: Work with current lender (not SBA directly, unless loan has defaulted)
Bank Term Loans
Options:
- Rate reduction (if rates have fallen)
- Extended amortization
- Temporary interest-only period
Process: Call relationship manager or loan servicing department
Credit Cards
Options:
- Hardship program (reduced APR, fixed payment plan)
- Typically 6-12 month programs
- Account usually closed during program
Process: Call card issuer, ask for "hardship department"
Equipment Financing
Options:
- Extended term
- Temporarily reduced payment
- Refinance with same lender at current equipment value
Process: Contact lender's workout or special assets department
Commercial Real Estate Loans
Options:
- Balloon payment extension (push out 1-5 years)
- Rate reduction
- Temporary debt service reduction
Process: Submit formal loan modification request with updated property financials
Real-World Restructuring Examples
Example 1: Extended Term
Before:
- Loan balance: $200,000
- Interest rate: 8%
- Remaining term: 5 years
- Monthly payment: $4,056
After Restructuring (Extended to 10 years):
- Loan balance: $200,000 (unchanged)
- Interest rate: 8% (unchanged)
- New term: 10 years
- New monthly payment: $2,427
- Savings: $1,629/month
Trade-off: Pay more total interest over life of loan, but immediate cash flow relief
Example 2: Rate Reduction
Before:
- Loan balance: $150,000
- Interest rate: 12%
- Term: 7 years remaining
- Monthly payment: $2,529
After Restructuring (Rate Reduced to 8%):
- Loan balance: $150,000
- Interest rate: 8%
- Term: 7 years
- New monthly payment: $2,285
- Savings: $244/month + $17,136 total interest
Example 3: Interest-Only Period
Before:
- Loan balance: $100,000
- Interest rate: 10%
- Monthly payment: $2,125 (principal + interest)
After Restructuring (12 months interest-only):
- Monthly payment for 12 months: $833 (interest only)
- Temporary savings: $1,292/month
- After 12 months: Resume regular payments (slightly higher to catch up)
Fees and Costs
Restructuring isn't always free. Expect:
- Modification fee: 1-2% of loan balance (sometimes waived)
- Processing fee: $250-1,000
- Legal fees: If attorneys involved (lender's fees may be passed to you)
- Appraisal/valuation: For secured loans (property, equipment)
Total costs: Typically $1,000-5,000 depending on loan size and complexity
Negotiate fees: If you're in hardship, request fee waiver or add fees to loan balance
Credit Impact of Restructuring
If You're Current on Payments
- Minimal to no impact
- Some lenders report as "modified" or "payment plan"
- Better than late payments or default
If You're Already Behind
- Late payments already reported (damage done)
- Restructuring helps you get current
- Better than continued delinquency
Best Practice
Ask lender: "How will this modification be reported to credit bureaus?" Get answer in writing before agreeing.
Need Help Negotiating Restructuring?
Get connected with debt restructuring specialists
Get Free AssessmentWhen Restructuring Won't Work
Lenders may decline restructuring if:
- You're already in default (90+ days late): Past workout window, may need settlement or bankruptcy
- Business is clearly failing: No viable path to repayment
- Multiple prior restructurings: Already modified several times
- Insufficient documentation: Can't prove hardship or ability to pay modified amount
- Lender policy: Some lenders don't offer modifications
Alternatives if restructuring is denied:
- Debt Consolidation (refinance with new lender)
- Debt Settlement (pay less than owed)
- Chapter 11 Bankruptcy (court-ordered restructuring)
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes—and this is actually the best time. Lenders are more willing to help before you default. If you see trouble ahead (revenue declining, major expense coming), contact lender immediately. Don't wait until you're behind.
No set limit, but lenders become less willing after 1-2 modifications. Each restructuring signals worsening financial health. If you need a third modification, lender may require more aggressive action (settlement, collateral, or suggest bankruptcy).
Depends on your situation. Restructuring is better if: You can afford modified payments, want to preserve credit, and business is viable. Settlement is better if: You genuinely can't afford any payment level, are willing to tank your credit, and have (or can save) lump sum for settlement offer.
Sometimes. If you're asking for significant concessions (major rate reduction, large term extension), lender may request additional security: personal guarantee (if not already), lien on other assets, or cash reserves. This is negotiable—don't accept without considering alternatives.
Next Steps
Prepare Your Case
- Gather financial documentation
- Calculate what you can afford
- Write hardship letter
- Determine specific request
Get Professional Help
For complex situations or large loans:
- Business attorney review
- Debt restructuring consultant
- Financial advisor guidance
Explore Your Restructuring Options
See what modifications might be available for your specific debts
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