pressure on a piggy bank

Recognising the early signs of financial pressure — and why seeking advice sooner can make all the difference

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If you’re running a business in the current environment, feeling under pressure doesn’t mean you’ve failed — it means you’re operating in a higher cost, more uncertain economy. What matters most is recognising when those pressures are starting to affect decision making, cash flow or long term viability, and knowing when to seek advice.

Our March 2026 Business Confidence Survey, based on responses from 245 UK businesses, shows that many owners are already adapting to challenging conditions. More than half (53.9%) expect trading conditions to worsen in 2026/27, while 69.8% cite rising tax and operating costs as one of their biggest challenges.

Against this backdrop, it’s not surprising that more business owners are questioning whether their current approach is sustainable — and whether they need additional support.

Potential warning signs financial pressure

Financial pressure doesn’t usually arrive overnight. In most cases, it builds gradually, often masked by day today firefighting. Common early signs include:

  • tightening cashflow or an increasing reliance on overdrafts
  • difficulty keeping up with HMRC payments or creditor terms
  • postponing investment or cutting back on essential spend
  • increasing prices simply to stand still, not to grow
  • sleepless nights spent worrying about “what happens if things get worse”

Our survey found that 70.6% of businesses expect to increase prices in the near term, reflecting how many owners are trying to protect margins as costs rise. While price increases can be a sensible response, they can also signal that pressure is starting to accumulate elsewhere in the business.

Importance of early advice

One of the biggest misconceptions around restructuring and insolvency is that advice is only needed when a business is about to fail. In reality, the earlier you seek support, the more options are available.

Early advice can help you:

  • understand your true financial position
  • identify pressure points before they become critical
  • explore informal restructuring options
  • engage with lenders or HMRC from a position of control
  • protect the value of the business and the people within it

By the time options are limited, decisions become reactive rather than strategic.

Stabilise and reshape your business

Restructuring is not the same as insolvency and it’s important to separate the two. Restructuring is about stabilising and reshaping a business so it can continue — often without entering a formal insolvency process at all.

Many businesses that seek early restructuring advice go on to renegotiate funding or repayment terms, adjust cost structures, improve cashflow forecasting and, importantly, regain confidence and clarity around their next steps.

In an environment where confidence remains cautious and costs are firmly embedded in business planning, taking a proactive approach is increasingly common - and sensible.

You don’t have to navigate this alone

Our survey highlights that business owners are not immune to uncertainty, but it also shows a strong desire for clarity, planning and support. Recognising when to ask for help is a sign of good leadership, not weakness.

Our Restructuring and Insolvency team works with business owners well before a crisis point is reached, providing confidential, practical advice tailored to your situation — whether that’s helping you assess options, stabilise cashflow, engage with stakeholders or plan a structured path forward.

If you’re starting to feel that pressure is influencing more of your decisions than you’d like, speaking to an adviser early can help you regain control and understand the choices available to you. Seeking advice sooner doesn’t mean you expect the worst it means you’re planning for the best possible outcome.


For further advice and support, please get in touch. Call 0808 144 5575 or email help@armstrongwatson.co.uk.

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