UK SMEs trapped in a ‘Seven-Month Economy’ as confidence crisis stalls investment
grenke’s Renewed Lease of Life Report has found that UK SMEs have undergone a fundamental shift in mindset – and behaviour – from growth to resilience. Surveying 500 SMEs across the UK, the report found that just 6% are currently confident and ready to grow, with over a third (37%) struggling or under significant pressure.
grenke’s previous 2024 New Lease of Life report found that 86% of SMEs wanted to thrive, not just survive. In 2026, that ambition has been worn down by intensifying pressure from all directions.
The new Seven-Month Economy
As businesses prioritise short-term stability over long-term growth, UK SMEs are, on average, planning major investment decisions seven months ahead; just 14% are currently able to see beyond the next 12 months. Three-quarters (74%) say making the wrong long-term investment decision feels riskier than it did two years ago. The top challenges holding back growth are energy costs (76%), reduced or unpredictable customer demand (66%), cashflow issues (59%), regulatory burden (58%) and access to finance (55%).
Growth on hold
With 85% of UK SMEs experiencing cashflow pressure, the report found that 42% of decision-makers are using cost cutting as their primary survival strategy. 83% identified at least one area that has stagnated over the last 12 months due to financing and cashflow issues, with staff hiring the hardest-hit area (34%) followed by launching new products or services (23%), expanding into new markets (23%), marketing (23%) and investment in training (22%).
Comparing the 2026 and 2024 data, what emerges is a flatlining of the SME economy. Across every key investment area, SMEs cite cashflow constraints causing real stagnation in their businesses.
Sub-optimal equipment, sub-optimal business
Nearly half (46%) of SME equipment is currently sub-optimal, impacting SMEs in all areas of performance from higher running costs (70%) and holding business back from full potential (64%) through tor reduced productivity (63%) and lower staff engagement (56%). More downtime (55%), making it harder to attract staff (52%) and poorer customer experience (46%) are other areas affected by sub-optimal equipment.
The Great Upgrade: the pressure to modernise
The pressure to modernise emerges as another burden for over half (57%) of SMEs driven by competitors’ technology (39%), sustainability requirements (35%), rising customer expectations (34%) and the pace of AI change (33%). 58% say AI is directly accelerating the need to upgrade equipment. Yet 64% say the cost and risk feel out of reach, and 89% are more cautious about major investment than 18 months ago, citing energy costs (42%), cashflow uncertainty (38%) and cost volatility (31%) as the main barriers. In terms of unlocking investment, SMEs cite predictable monthly costs (40%), flexibility to upgrade as needs change (35%) and maintenance included (34%). 79% acknowledge that employees perform better with the best equipment.
The leasing paradox
The Renewed Lease of Life identifies a series of contradictions when it comes to SME leasing attitudes. 90% see clear benefits, 63% say flexibility is now more valuable than ownership, and 61% say leasing would help unlock growth opportunities. Despite this, adoption has fallen from 44% in 2024 to 38% today, with those ruling it out as a finance option rising from 21% to 32%. The report also found that just 15% of SMEs would choose leasing if they needed equipment in the next three months. 28% would opt for a business loan – down from 40% in 2024 – while credit card (19%) and overdraft (13%) use has risen. The short-term, reactive instincts define SME decision making in 2026, as businesses look for quick fixes as they try to ride out the current economic climate.

Commenting on the Renewed Lease of Life Report, David Horton, UK MD of Sales, grenke, said: The story of the UK SME in 2026 is one of genuine endurance in the face of relentless and compounding pressure. Businesses know what they need to do: what they need is the confidence, conditions and partners to make the next steps feel possible.”
“Rather than waiting for the economy to improve, the real opportunity is to reduce decision risk, restore the conditions for confidence and help SMEs move from belief to action. This is how we’ll bring a renewed lease of life to the businesses that are the heartbeat of the UK economy.”
Download your copy of The Renewed Lease of Life here.

