Adore Beauty Group Lifts CBA Debt Facility Limit to $25.2M

By Josua Ferreira -

Adore Beauty refinances debt facilities and lifts total limit to $25.2 million

Adore Beauty Group (ASX: ABY) has refinanced its debt facilities with existing lender the Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA). The three-year agreement increases the Group’s total facility limit to $25.2 million, up from $18.2 million.

The refinancing is intended to give the omni-channel beauty retailer greater flexibility to fund working capital and the development of its new National Distribution Centre (NDC) as it scales. The deal maintains the Group’s long-standing banking relationship with CBA.

How the new facility is structured

The refinanced arrangement is made up of two components: a working capital facility and an asset-backed loan tied to the new distribution centre. According to the Group, the facility’s size, structure and covenant flexibility reflect its increased scale, new omni-channel footprint, and the soon-to-be-completed development of a semi-automated NDC.

Adore Beauty Debt Facility Structure

The Group noted that its long-standing CBA relationship was maintained, the existing security structure was preserved, and a “modern institutional lending framework” was adopted.

Facility component Amount Purpose
Working capital facility $17 million Ongoing working capital / inventory
Asset-backed loan $8 million New National Distribution Centre (NDC)
Total facility limit $25.2 million Up from $18.2 million

CEO Commentary

“The expanded debt facility provides an appropriate level of flexibility to support our current and future working capital needs. While we are nearing the end of the most significant investment cycle in our 26-year history, our national store network requires a higher level of ongoing inventory in addition to seasonal trading peaks and growth initiatives. Importantly, we have maintained our long-standing banking relationship with CBA, preserved the existing security structure, and adopted a modern institutional lending framework,” said Sacha Laing, Chief Executive Officer.

Why a working capital facility matters for a retailer

A working capital facility is a form of revolving credit that funds a company’s day-to-day operating needs. For an omni-channel retailer, the largest of these needs is typically inventory, the stock held across physical stores and warehouses ready to sell.

Retailers operating a national store network must carry more inventory than online-only sellers, and demand can spike during seasonal trading peaks. A larger facility gives a business the headroom to fund this stock without straining its cash position.

An asset-backed loan, by contrast, is debt secured against a specific asset. In this case, the $8 million loan is tied to the new National Distribution Centre. For investors, the increased facility headroom reduces funding pressure as inventory requirements rise across the store network.

What this means for Adore Beauty investors

The refinancing supports the final stage of the Group’s investment cycle, including the soon-to-be-completed semi-automated NDC and its national store rollout. Management described the Group as nearing the end of the most significant investment cycle in its 26-year history.

The increased limit and covenant flexibility may be read as signals of lender confidence in the Group’s increased scale. Key takeaways from the announcement include:

  • Total facility lifted to $25.2 million from $18.2 million

  • Three-year term with CBA, with the existing lender retained

  • Existing security structure preserved

  • Funds support working capital and the new NDC

This is a refinancing rather than a transformational deal, and no NDC cost, completion date, or financial impact beyond the figures above was disclosed.

About Adore Beauty Group

Founded in 2000, Adore Beauty Group is a multi-banner beauty, lifestyle and wellness retailer. The Group includes Adore Beauty, Australia’s first beauty-focused e-commerce destination, and iKOU, a wellness and beauty brand born in the Blue Mountains of NSW. Now an integrated omni-channel retailer combining an online platform with a national store network, the Group offers more than 300 brands and 15,000 products across beauty, wellness and lifestyle categories, operating in Australia and New Zealand.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Adore Beauty debt facility refinancing with CBA?

Adore Beauty Group (ASX: ABY) has refinanced its existing debt facilities with Commonwealth Bank of Australia on a three-year term, increasing the total facility limit from $18.2 million to $25.2 million to support working capital and the development of a new National Distribution Centre.

What is the difference between Adore Beauty's working capital facility and its asset-backed loan?

The $17 million working capital facility is a revolving credit line used to fund day-to-day inventory and operating needs, while the $8 million asset-backed loan is secured specifically against the new National Distribution Centre being built by the Group.

Why did Adore Beauty need to increase its debt facility?

Adore Beauty's expansion into a national store network requires higher ongoing inventory levels compared to its previous online-only model, and the new semi-automated National Distribution Centre needed dedicated funding — both factors drove the need for a larger facility.

When will Adore Beauty's National Distribution Centre be completed?

The announcement did not disclose a specific completion date, but management described the NDC as 'soon-to-be-completed' and noted the Group is nearing the end of the most significant investment cycle in its 26-year history.

Does the Adore Beauty refinancing involve any new lenders or changes to security?

No — the refinancing retains Commonwealth Bank of Australia as the sole lender and preserves the existing security structure, with management noting the adoption of a 'modern institutional lending framework' within the same banking relationship.

Josua Ferreira
By Josua Ferreira
Partnership Director
Josua Ferreira holds a Bachelor of Commerce in Marketing and Advertising and brings a background in publication, business development, and ASX market storytelling. He has worked with listed companies across the resource sector and broader market, combining sharp commercial instincts with a genuine commitment to keeping investors informed.
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