Learn what a loan loss provision is, how it differs from the allowance balance, and why provisions matter for bank earnings, capital, and credit quality.
A loan loss provision is the expense a bank or lender recognizes to reflect expected losses in its loan portfolio.
It is a forward-looking acknowledgment that some borrowers will not repay in full.
Banks and regulators may use nearby labels such as provision for credit losses (PCL) or provision for loan losses, but in practice they point to the same core idea: recognizing expected credit deterioration through an income-statement charge.
This distinction is important:
the loan loss provision is the expense recognized in the income statement for the period
the accumulated balance created by provisions is often called the allowance or reserve for credit losses
So the provision is the flow. The allowance balance is the stock that builds up over time.
Loan loss provisions matter because they affect:
earnings
reported balance-sheet strength
investor confidence
regulatory capital pressure
If a lender underestimates future losses, profits can look stronger than they really are. If it raises provisions sharply, current profit falls but balance-sheet realism improves.
Provisioning often rises when:
borrower quality deteriorates
delinquency trends worsen
economic conditions weaken
collateral values decline
This is why provisions often climb during recessions or sector stress.
Provisioning is one of the practical accounting expressions of credit risk.
It translates expected deterioration into a financial statement cost.
That is why provision trends are closely watched by analysts and regulators. They can signal weakness in the loan book before full default losses are realized.
Nonperforming loans (NPLs) often lead to greater provisioning pressure, but the two ideas are not identical.
NPLs describe loan performance status
provisions describe expected loss recognition
A bank can increase provisions before loans fully migrate into the NPL category if it expects credit quality to worsen.
Higher provisions reduce current earnings, and lower retained earnings can ultimately weaken capital strength.
That is why large provision spikes can put pressure on measures such as the capital adequacy ratio (CAR).
Nonperforming Loan (NPL): A direct indicator of loan deterioration.
Credit Risk: The underlying reason provisions exist.
Default Risk: Closely related to the probability of credit loss.
Banking: The industry where provisioning is a core credit-quality measure.
Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR): Can be pressured when provisions reduce earnings and capital.