Build an Expense Variance Log That Speeds Up Lending Decisions
When lenders see every variance tied to an owner and mitigation plan, they stop asking for endless follow-ups.
Lenders know expenses move. What worries them is silence. Keep a living log of major variances and you turn every surprise into a trust-building moment.

1. Decide which variances make the log
Use simple thresholds so the log stays actionable:
- Any line item moving more than 5% or \$100K.
- Spend tied to covenants (e.g., R&D caps, SG&A targets).
- Items funded through your borrowing base or debt draws.
2. Capture the story in four columns
Create a table with the essentials:
| Variance | Driver | Owner | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marketing +\$320K | Paid social pilot | VP Growth | Cut spend 30% + renegotiate vendor |
| Cloud +\$180K | Usage spike | CTO | Reserved instances + cost alert |
Add dates so lenders can track progress.

3. Tie variances to liquidity
For each entry, quantify the runway or borrowing-base impact:
- Cash burn change vs. plan.
- Headroom against expense-related covenants.
- Whether the variance triggers a draw or paydown.
This links the log back to your lender packet.
4. Share the log with the same cadence as your certificates
Attach the updated log to the Monday update you already send with borrowing base certificates. Highlight any entries still open after two weeks.
5. Archive for exam day
Store every weekly log in your lender data room. When auditors ask about last summer’s SG&A spike, you have the narrative ready.
FAQ: Expense variance logs
- How long should the log be?
- Keep 8–10 rows visible. Move closed items to a monthly archive.
- Who owns it?
- FP&A maintains the file, but Treasury reviews before sharing externally.
- Do we include cost savings?
- Yes—positive variances build credibility too.