Financial Guarantee Letter
FINANCIAL GUARANTEE LETTER
Date: [Effective Date]
TO: [Beneficiary Name]
[Beneficiary Address]
RE: Financial Guarantee — [Debtor Name]
Dear [Beneficiary Name],
The undersigned, [Guarantor Name], with an address at [Guarantor Address] (the "Guarantor"), hereby unconditionally and irrevocably agrees as follows:
1. GUARANTEE
1.1 Guaranteed Obligation. For good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, Guarantor hereby provides a [Guarantee Type] to [Beneficiary Name] (the "Beneficiary") with respect to the following obligation of [Debtor Name] (the "Debtor"):
[Obligation Description]
1.2 Scope. This is a [Guarantee Scope].
1.3 Maximum Liability. Guarantor's total liability under this Guarantee shall not exceed [Guarantee Amount].
2. DEMAND PROCEDURE
[Demand Procedure]
3. TERM
This Guarantee is effective as of [Effective Date] and shall remain in full force until [Expiration Date], unless earlier terminated by written agreement of both Guarantor and Beneficiary.
4. GENERAL PROVISIONS
4.1 Waiver of Defenses. To the fullest extent permitted by law, Guarantor waives any defense based upon the disability of Debtor, any change in the terms of the underlying obligation (unless such change materially increases Guarantor's exposure without Guarantor's written consent), or any failure by Beneficiary to proceed first against Debtor (except in the case of a guaranty of collection).
4.2 Governing Law. This Guarantee shall be governed by the laws of the State of [Governing State], without regard to conflict of law principles.
4.3 Entire Agreement. This Guarantee sets forth the entire agreement of Guarantor with respect to the guaranteed obligation. No modification shall be effective unless in writing and signed by Guarantor and Beneficiary.
4.4 Severability. If any provision of this Guarantee is held invalid or unenforceable, the remaining provisions shall continue in full force and effect.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned Guarantor has executed this Financial Guarantee Letter as of the date first written above.
GUARANTOR:
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name: [Guarantor Name]
Address: [Guarantor Address]
ACKNOWLEDGED BY BENEFICIARY:
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name / Title: _______________________________
On behalf of: [Beneficiary Name]
Guarantor
________________
Signature
Beneficiary
________________
Signature
What Is a Financial Guarantee Letter?
A Financial Guarantee Letter in the United States binds a guarantor to satisfy another party's obligation if that party defaults.
A Financial Guarantee Letter creates a secondary obligation — the guarantor's promise to pay becomes operative only if and when the primary obligor defaults. Courts distinguish between two fundamental types of guaranty based on when the creditor can pursue the guarantor. A guaranty of payment (also called an absolute guaranty) allows the creditor to proceed directly against the guarantor immediately upon the debtor's default, without first exhausting remedies against the debtor or proceeding against any collateral. A guaranty of collection (also called a conditional guaranty) requires the creditor to first obtain a judgment against the debtor and exhaust all collection remedies before pursuing the guarantor. Commercial lenders — including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Citibank — uniformly require guaranties of payment because the conditional guaranty provides far weaker protection.
Personal guarantees are pervasive in US commercial lending to small and medium-sized businesses. The Small Business Administration (SBA) requires personal guarantees from all individuals owning 20% or more of an SBA-guaranteed borrower under SBA SOP 50 10 7. Commercial real estate lenders require personal guarantees from the principals of real estate LLCs and LPs. Equipment lessors, trade creditors, and landlords routinely require personal guarantees from the owners of thinly capitalized business entities. The personal guarantor's exposure extends to all personal assets — real estate, bank accounts, investment portfolios, and personal property — not protected by applicable exemptions under state homestead law (Florida Constitution Art. X § 4, Texas Property Code § 41.001) or bankruptcy exemptions.
A Financial Guarantee Letter differs from a surety bond: a surety bond is a three-party arrangement among the principal (the party obligated to perform), the obligee (the party requiring the guarantee), and the surety company (a licensed insurance carrier that charges a premium for the guarantee). A Financial Guarantee Letter is a direct bilateral agreement between the guarantor and the beneficiary/creditor, not involving a licensed surety and not requiring payment of a premium to an insurance company. For large commercial obligations requiring guarantees from licensed sureties — construction performance bonds, license and permit bonds, court bonds — a surety bond rather than a personal guarantee letter is the appropriate instrument.
When Do You Need a Financial Guarantee Letter?
A Financial Guarantee Letter is needed whenever a creditor, lender, landlord, or counterparty requires additional assurance that an obligation will be paid, beyond the creditworthiness of the primary debtor alone.
Small business loans require personal guarantees in virtually all cases where the borrower is a corporation, LLC, or other entity. SBA loan programs (7(a) loans, 504 loans) require unlimited personal guarantees from all owners of 20% or more of the borrowing entity under SBA SOP 50 10 7. Private commercial lenders (community banks, regional banks, credit unions) also routinely require personal guarantees for business loans made to entities with limited operating history or insufficient assets to support unsecured borrowing.
Commercial real estate leases require personal guarantees when the tenant is a newly formed entity, a startup with no financial track record, or a company with insufficient balance sheet assets to justify the landlord's credit risk over the full lease term. Real estate investment trusts (REITs) and institutional landlords — such as CBRE, JLL-managed properties, and Brookfield Properties — require personal guarantees from principals of LLC and LP tenants for lease terms of five years or more.
Trade credit and supplier arrangements require guarantees when a supplier extends payment terms (net 30, net 60, or net 90) to a business customer with limited credit history. A financial guarantee letter from the business owner reduces the supplier's credit risk without requiring the customer to prepay or establish a letter of credit at a financial institution.
Student sponsorship and immigration processes use financial guarantee letters when a US person or entity is sponsoring a foreign national's student visa (F-1) or exchange visitor visa (J-1) and must demonstrate financial capacity to cover the visitor's educational and living expenses. USCIS and consular officers review financial guarantee letters as part of the visa application process.
Real estate purchase transactions use financial guarantee letters when a buyer's credit profile is insufficient to qualify for a mortgage alone and a co-signer or guarantor is needed to satisfy lender underwriting requirements. The Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Selling Guides both address guarantor arrangements for conventional mortgage loans.
What to Include in Your Financial Guarantee Letter
A legally enforceable US Financial Guarantee Letter must contain specific elements to satisfy the Statute of Frauds, clearly define the scope of the guarantor's obligation, and provide the creditor with practical enforcement rights.
Identification of parties: The letter must identify the guarantor by full legal name (and, for an individual, address and Social Security Number or FEIN for identification purposes), the primary debtor/borrower by full legal name, and the creditor/beneficiary by full legal name and address. The relationship between the guarantor and the primary debtor — parent company and subsidiary, business owner and LLC, parent and adult child — should be stated because it provides context for the guarantee and may affect enforceability in certain circumstances.
Underlying obligation description: The letter must specifically describe the underlying obligation being guaranteed — the loan agreement with reference number and date, the commercial lease with property address and term, the supply contract with purchase order numbers, or the student sponsorship with visa application reference. A guarantee that fails to identify the underlying obligation with sufficient specificity may be unenforceable for lack of definiteness. For continuing guarantees covering all present and future obligations of the debtor to the creditor, the letter must expressly state the continuing nature of the guarantee.
Scope and cap on liability: The letter should state the maximum dollar amount of the guarantor's liability. An unlimited guarantee exposes the guarantor to the full outstanding balance including principal, accrued interest at the contract rate, default interest, late fees, collection costs, and attorney's fees — which can far exceed the original principal. Many guarantors negotiate a capped guarantee limiting their exposure to a specific dollar amount (e.g., six months' rent under a commercial lease, or 100% of the loan principal but excluding interest and fees). The Statute of Frauds does not require a specific dollar cap, but commercial practice strongly favors explicit caps.
Type of guaranty: The letter should expressly state whether it is a guaranty of payment (the guarantor pays immediately upon default without requiring the creditor to pursue the debtor first) or a guaranty of collection (the creditor must first exhaust remedies against the debtor). Commercial guarantees should almost always be guaranties of payment to provide the creditor with immediate enforcement rights.
Waiver of defenses: Commercial guarantees typically include the guarantor's waiver of suretyship defenses that would otherwise be available under state law — including waiver of notice of default, waiver of presentment and demand, waiver of the right to require the creditor to pursue the debtor first, waiver of any right to require the creditor to preserve collateral, and waiver of the right to assert the primary debtor's defenses against the creditor. Courts enforce such waivers when they are expressly stated in the written guarantee.
Duration and termination: The letter must state whether the guarantee is for a fixed term or continuing. A continuing guarantee may be terminable by the guarantor upon written notice to the creditor — under Cal. Civ. Code § 2815, a continuing guarantee may be revoked as to future transactions by notice, though it remains effective for obligations incurred before the notice. The letter should specify any notification requirements and address whether the guarantee survives the guarantor's death or legal incapacity.
Notarization and signature: While most states do not require notarization for a guarantee to be enforceable, commercial lenders and landlords typically require notarization as evidence that the guarantor signed voluntarily and that the signature is authentic. The guarantor's signature must comply with the applicable state's Statute of Frauds formalities — a signature by a duly authorized officer of a corporate guarantor must be accompanied by evidence of the officer's authority (a board resolution or certificate of authority).
Sources & Citations
Statutory citations link to official government sources.
- Cal. Civ. Code § 2815CA (US) official
- Texas Property Code § 41.001TX (US) official
Cite this page
Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:
Forms Legal. (2026). Financial Guarantee Letter (United States) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/usa/financial/agreements/financial-guarantee-letter
"Financial Guarantee Letter (United States)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/usa/financial/agreements/financial-guarantee-letter.
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author = {{Forms Legal}},
title = {Financial Guarantee Letter (United States)},
year = {2026},
howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/usa/financial/agreements/financial-guarantee-letter}},
note = {Free legal document template. Based on Statute of Frauds (UCC §1-206)}
}Frequently Asked Questions
A financial guarantee letter is a written promise by a guarantor to satisfy the financial obligations of a primary debtor if the debtor fails to perform. Under US contract law, a guarantee is enforceable when it meets three elements: offer (the guarantor's promise), acceptance (by the creditor/beneficiary), and consideration (typically the creditor's extension of credit or forbearance from enforcing a claim). The Statute of Frauds, codified in most states (e.g., UCC § 1-206 and state equivalents), requires guarantees to be in writing and signed by the guarantor to be enforceable. A financial guarantee letter that is signed, identifies the underlying obligation, and is accepted by the beneficiary satisfies these requirements. Courts distinguish between a 'guaranty of payment' — where the guarantor pays immediately upon debtor default without requiring the creditor to first pursue the debtor — and a 'guaranty of collection,' where the creditor must exhaust remedies against the debtor first. Most commercial guarantee letters create a guaranty of payment, which is far more valuable to the creditor.
A personal guarantee is issued by an individual — typically a business owner, officer, or director — who pledges their personal assets to back the debts of a business entity. A corporate guarantee is issued by a corporation or LLC that pledges its own assets to back the obligations of an affiliated entity or subsidiary. In the context of commercial lending, lenders frequently require personal guarantees from individual owners of small businesses, particularly when the business lacks the track record or assets to qualify for credit on its own merits. The guarantor's personal assets — including real estate, bank accounts, and investments — are exposed to collection if the guaranteed obligation is not paid. Corporate guarantees, by contrast, limit exposure to the corporate assets of the guarantor entity. Both types must satisfy the Statute of Frauds and should clearly identify the underlying obligation, the maximum dollar amount guaranteed, and any conditions precedent to the guarantor's obligation.
Yes. A guarantee letter can and often should include a 'cap' — a maximum dollar amount that limits the guarantor's total liability. Without a cap, the guarantor may be liable for the full outstanding balance including interest, fees, collection costs, and attorney's fees, which can greatly exceed the original principal amount. Similarly, a guarantee letter can include an expiration date after which the guarantor's obligation terminates, though the guarantor typically remains liable for obligations that arose before the expiration date. Some guarantees are 'continuing guarantees' that cover all obligations of the debtor to the creditor over time — including future extensions of credit — while others are limited to a specific transaction. The scope of the guarantee (continuing vs. specific, capped vs. unlimited, and the expiration date) are the most important terms to negotiate and clearly state in the letter.
The death of a guarantor does not automatically terminate the guarantee. Under the majority rule in the United States, a guarantee survives the guarantor's death, and the creditor may file a claim against the guarantor's estate. However, if the guarantee is a 'continuing guarantee' covering future extensions of credit, many states provide that the guarantee terminates as to new advances made after the creditor receives notice of the guarantor's death (see, e.g., Cal. Civ. Code § 2815). The guarantor's estate may be liable for obligations arising before death but not for new credit extended after notice of death is given. If the guarantor becomes insolvent or files for bankruptcy, the automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362 may temporarily bar creditors from pursuing the guarantor, but the guarantee is not discharged in bankruptcy in most cases. Creditors with personal guarantees from a business owner should be aware that the business's bankruptcy does not discharge the personal guarantee.
In most US states, notarization is not required for a financial guarantee letter to be legally enforceable. The Statute of Frauds requires only that the guarantee be in writing and signed by the guarantor. However, notarization provides important evidentiary benefits: it establishes that the guarantor signed the document voluntarily, confirms the guarantor's identity, and may deter later claims that the guarantor's signature was forged or obtained under duress. Some creditors — particularly financial institutions — require notarization as a matter of internal policy. In states where guarantees are recorded (as with mortgage guarantees), notarization may be required as a prerequisite to recording. Best practice is to have the guarantor sign before a notary and to retain the original signed and notarized letter.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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