One region, one set of rules
The South West — Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly, Devon, Somerset, Dorset, Wiltshire, Gloucestershire and the city of Bristol — all sits inside the single legal jurisdiction of England and Wales. Whether the lender is in Exeter and the borrower in Bristol, the same contract law governs the loan, the same courts hear any dispute, and one properly drafted agreement covers it. The builder reads each person’s postcode and confirms the jurisdiction automatically.
Example: a Bristol first-flat loan
Sue and Alan, retired in Exeter, are lending their daughter £30,000 toward a flat in Bristol — her salary covers the mortgage, but Bristol deposits have outrun what a nurse can save. The agreement they sign does three quiet jobs: it fixes a monthly repayment she can actually afford, it records that the money is a loan, not a gift (her brother will one day thank them for that clarity), and it gives the mortgage lender the honest answer it will ask for about where the deposit came from.
That pattern — parents in the shires helping the next generation into Bristol, Bath or Exeter prices — is the most common family loan in the region. The rest look familiar too: a car for the commute where the branch line doesn’t reach, a bridge between seasonal jobs on the coast, seed money for a workshop business in Cornwall.
What the agreement should pin down
- The amount and the date the money moves — with a payment reference on the bank transfer so the advance is provable.
- The repayment plan — instalments or a single date, and what happens if a payment is missed.
- Interest, if any. There’s no statutory cap between family members; the builder warns (never blocks) at 25%+. Remember interest you receive is taxable income.
- Loan, not gift — stated in terms. It protects the borrower’s siblings, the lender’s estate planning, and everyone’s memory.
- Signatures from both sides — electronic signing is valid in England and Wales, and it’s how LendRight finishes the job.
If repayment stalls in the South West
Money claims start online wherever you live — through Money Claim Online or the County Court Money Claims Centre — and claims up to £10,000 usually go to the small claims track, built for people without solicitors. If an in-person hearing is ever needed, it’s listed at a county court hearing centre convenient to the defendant — the region is well served, from Bristol and Bath to Exeter, Plymouth, Truro, Bournemouth and Swindon. In practice, a signed agreement plus a bank record is usually enough to make the conversation end long before a courtroom.
Under the Limitation Act 1980 you generally have six years from a missed due date to bring a claim on a simple contract — one more reason the agreement should set real dates.
Scotland and Northern Ireland — a different story
If either of you lives in Scotland or Northern Ireland, the builder will tell you honestly that we can’t serve you yet — those are separate legal systems, and a template written for England and Wales isn’t automatically right there. Everything about that decision is on our coverage page.
Put it in writing — kindly.
Draft free in about 4 minutes. Pay the one-time £24.99 only when you send it for signing.
Create my loan agreement