Line of Credit
An agreement between a
bank and a company or an individual to provide a certain amount in
loans on demand from the
borrower. The borrower is under no obligation to actually take out a loan at any particular time, but may take part of the
funds at any time over a period of several years. This agreement is fairly common in situations in which a business must make payroll but does not always have the
operating income to do so, especially when its operating income is seasonal or otherwise varies from month to month. It is also called open-end credit or a revolving line of credit. See also:
Credit Card.
Farlex Financial Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Credit line.
A credit line, or line of credit, is a revolving credit agreement that allows you to write checks or make cash withdrawals of amounts up to your credit limit.
When you use the credit -- sometimes called accessing the line -- you owe interest on the amount you borrow. But when that amount has been repaid you can borrow it again.
A home equity line of credit (HELOC) is secured by your home, but other credit lines, such as an overdraft arrangement linked to your checking account, are unsecured. In general, the interest rate on a secured credit line is less than the rate on an unsecured line.