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Partnership & Co-Ownership Aircraft Financing: Understanding Multi-Borrower Loan Structures

Aircraft partnerships and co-ownership arrangements allow multiple individuals to share acquisition costs and operating expenses while splitting access to aircraft. This structure enables broader participation in aircraft ownership than single-owner models would otherwise permit. However, financing co-owned aircraft introduces complexity in loan structuring, personal guarantee requirements, liability allocation, and partnership governance that single-owner transactions avoid.

Lenders approach partnership aircraft loans with heightened caution due to greater complexity in default scenarios, partner disputes, forced sales, and operational conflicts. Understanding how lenders structure multi-borrower loans, what personal guarantee requirements apply, how liability is allocated in default scenarios, and how partnership agreements affect loan terms is essential for successfully securing favorable financing for partnership aircraft acquisitions.

Joint Borrower Requirements and Credit Evaluation

When multiple individuals or entities co-borrow on aircraft loans, lenders treat each borrower's creditworthiness as supporting the loan obligation. This differs from general co-signing, where one borrower is primary and others secondary.

Individual Credit Assessment for Each Borrower

Lenders typically evaluate each partner's creditworthiness individually:

Compensating Factors in Multi-Borrower Structures

Multi-borrower arrangements can offer compensating factors that offset weaker individual profiles:

Majority vs. Unanimous Borrower Requirements

Lenders vary on whether all partners must meet credit standards or if majority strength is sufficient:

Liability and Default Scenarios in Co-Ownership

One major concern with partnership aircraft loans is how liability is allocated when one partner defaults or conflicts arise. Loan documents must clearly establish liability structures.

Joint and Several Liability

Most partnership aircraft loans use "joint and several liability" structures where each borrower is individually liable for the full loan amount:

Limited vs. Proportional Liability Arrangements

Some lenders will structure partnerships with limited liability where each partner's responsibility is capped at their ownership percentage:

Bankruptcy and Forced Exit Scenarios

Loan documents must address what happens if one partner faces financial distress or bankruptcy:

Partnership Agreement Requirements and Impact on Financing

Comprehensive partnership agreements are essential prerequisites for partnership aircraft financing. Lenders require specific provisions addressing operational and financial governance.

Essential Partnership Agreement Components

Loan documents typically require partnership agreements addressing:

Buy-Sell and Exit Provisions

Critical partnership provisions affecting future financing and ownership transitions include:

Operational Restrictions and Covenant Requirements

Loan documents may impose operational restrictions on partnerships:

Insurance for Co-Owned and Partnership Aircraft

Insurance structuring for partnership aircraft is more complex than single-owner arrangements due to multiple insurable interests and liability exposure.

Hull Insurance Considerations

Partnership aircraft hull insurance must account for multiple ownership interests:

Liability Coverage Allocation

Liability exposure in partnerships is more complex due to multiple pilots and diverse usage patterns:

Pilot and Usage Restrictions

Insurance underwriting for partnerships depends on authorized pilots and aircraft usage:

Ownership Structures and Financing Implications

Different partnership and co-ownership structures carry distinct financing implications and tax treatment.

General Partnership Structure

Simplest partnership form but carries unlimited personal liability:

Limited Partnership Structure

Partners include general partner(s) with unlimited liability and limited partners with liability capped at capital contribution:

Limited Liability Company (LLC) Structure

Increasingly popular for aircraft partnerships due to flexibility and liability protection:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can lenders require all partners to guarantee partnership aircraft loans?

Yes, and they typically do. Most lenders require personal guarantees from all managing partners. This exposes each partner to personal liability for full loan balance regardless of ownership percentage. Consider this carefully when structuring partnerships.

What happens to a partnership aircraft loan if one partner files bankruptcy?

The bankruptcy triggers potential loan default depending on loan document language. Lender may accelerate loan and force aircraft sale. Loan documents should specify bankruptcy as event of default. Surviving partners may have right to buy bankrupt partner's equity at formula price to avoid forced sale.

Can partners with different credit scores obtain financing together?

Yes, typically. Lenders will evaluate portfolio credit strength and may approve partnership despite one weaker partner if overall profile is acceptable. However, all borrowers usually must meet minimum credit thresholds (commonly 680+ FICO). Strong partners may offset weaker credits.

Are partnership aircraft loans more expensive than solo ownership financing?

Not necessarily. Partnership loans may carry similar rates to solo borrowers if partnership has strong combined financials. However, documentation complexity and guarantee requirements may add administrative costs. Compare loan terms between solo and partnership offers carefully.

What insurance coverage is essential for multi-owner aircraft?

Essential: hull insurance covering aircraft market value with all partners and lender listed; $2M+ liability coverage with cross-liability endorsement; all partners as additional insureds. Without cross-liability endorsement, insurer could deny claims between partners.

Practical Tips for Partnership Aircraft Financing Success

Related Articles on Partnership and Entity Structuring

For additional context on related topics, review our guides on entity structuring for aircraft ownership, aircraft insurance requirements, and financing aircraft partnerships and flying clubs. Understanding what lenders look for in aircraft financing helps optimize partnership loan applications.

External resources: AOPA Aircraft Partnerships · AOPA Aviation Finance · National Business Aviation Association · Federal Aviation Administration

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