Assessing Private Credit Readiness in 2026: Key Factors Beyond EBITDA

Sneha  |  January 15, 2026

Private credit remains one of the most important growth enablers for mid-market businesses. Yet in 2026, access to private debt is less about momentum and more about credibility. 

While revenue scale and EBITDA continue to anchor underwriting models, they are no longer decisive on their own. Private credit lenders are increasingly focused on how a business generates cash, how it plans to use capital, and how it will behave under pressure. 

Readiness today is not a label — it is a signal set. And those signals are being interpreted more carefully than ever.

1. Cash flow quality has replaced cash flow optics

The first and most critical shift in lender assessment is the move from reported profitability to cash flow credibility. In 2026, private credit lenders routinely deconstruct EBITDA to understand:

  • the repeatability of earnings
  • reliance on add-backs and non-recurring adjustments
  • customer concentration and contract durability
  • exposure to working capital swings and delayed collections

What matters is not just how much cash a business generates, but how predictable that cash is over time.

Lenders increasingly favour businesses with:

  • consistent EBITDA-to-cash conversion
  • visibility into future cash flows
  • a clear understanding of downside protection

In contrast, businesses that rely heavily on optimistic adjustments or future growth assumptions often struggle to progress — regardless of headline performance.

From a lender’s perspective, predictability creates confidence; volatility creates friction.

2. Repayment logic is the foundation of underwriting

Every private credit transaction ultimately hinges on a single question:

How does this loan get repaid — in reality, not in theory? 

In 2026, credit committees are increasingly reverse-engineering deals from repayment backwards. That means:

  • testing cash flows under conservative assumptions
  • modelling repayment capacity before considering growth upside
  • assessing how leverage evolves across the life of the facility

Growth ambition remains relevant, but only where it is clearly linked to debt serviceability. Lenders are wary of business plans that assume growth will “solve” repayment. 

The strongest borrowers demonstrate:

  • a credible base-case repayment path
  • resilience in downside scenarios
  • a clear rationale for any repayment deferral or bullet structure

In short, repayment must be designed, not implied.

3. Use of funds is a credibility test

Few areas reveal readiness — or the lack of it — as quickly as use of funds. 

Private credit lenders in 2026 expect deployment plans to be specific, measurable, and defensible. They want to understand:

  • exactly where capital will be deployed
  • how deployment ties to operational or strategic milestones
  • how those milestones support cash generation and repayment

Generic “growth capital” narratives or overly broad funding rationales often undermine otherwise strong opportunities. They introduce uncertainty rather than ambition. 

Focused use-of-funds frameworks, by contrast, signal:

  • strategic discipline
  • internal alignment
  • an understanding of return on invested capital

For lenders, clarity of deployment directly influences confidence in execution. 

4. Governance and decision-making now materially affect term

Governance is no longer a background consideration in private credit underwriting. It has become a pricing and structuring variable. 

In 2026, lenders pay close attention to:

  • how decisions are made and escalated
  • the quality and frequency of management reporting
  • alignment between shareholders, boards, and executives
  • evidence of financial and operational oversight

Strong governance reduces execution risk — and lenders increasingly reward that reduction with:

  • more flexible covenant structures
  • tailored reporting requirements
  • greater willingness to accommodate bespoke terms


Weak governance, by contrast, often leads to tighter controls, increased scrutiny, or prolonged diligence. 

Governance does not just protect lenders. It enables better partnerships.

5. Structure reflects preparedness, not negotiation strength

One of the most misunderstood aspects of private credit is flexibility. 

There is no doubt that deal structures in 2026 are becoming more bespoke — with tailored amortisation profiles, covenant frameworks, and layered capital solutions. However, flexibility is not something borrowers successfully negotiate into existence. 

It is something they earn through preparation. 

Lenders are far more willing to customise structures when borrowers demonstrate:

  • coherent financial narratives
  • realistic assumptions
  • clear operating logic
  • internal alignment on risk and priorities

When clarity is absent, lenders default to standardisation.

In private credit, structure is a consequence of readiness, not preference.

6. Timing is an expression of strategic maturity

Finally, readiness is inseparable from timing. 

Many of the strongest private credit outcomes in 2026 will not originate from urgency. They will originate from preparation. Businesses that invest time upfront to:

  • strengthen reporting and forecasting
  • align internally on capital strategy
  • pressure-test assumptions before lender engagement
  • enter funding conversations with leverage — not desperation.

Choosing not to raise immediately is often a strategic decision. It allows businesses to approach the market from a position of strength rather than necessity. 

In the eyes of lenders, patience often signals confidence.

Looking ahead

Private credit lenders in 2026 are not simply allocating capital — they are underwriting conviction. 

Beyond revenue and EBITDA, readiness today is defined by:

  • quality and predictability of cash flows
  • credibility of repayment logic
  • precision of capital deployment
  • governance discipline
  • structural coherence
Businesses that understand how lenders assess these factors — and prepare accordingly — are far better positioned to secure capital that genuinely supports long-term growth. 

At Fuse Capital, we work with founders, CFOs, and boards to build that clarity well before funding conversations begin. Because in private credit, the strongest outcomes are rarely rushed. 

They are prepared.