170+ Borrowing Money From Friends Quotes

Whether you have lent money to a friend, borrowed some, or are considering either, this array of insightful and thought-provoking quotes offers a fresh perspective to help you navigate such financial conundrums. Let’s embark on this enlightening journey together.

Borrowing Money From Friends Quotes

  1. “Borrowing from a friend can be a bridge, but it can also be a canyon between you.”
  2. “Remain friends, not financiers.”
  3. “When friends become bankers, emotions become transactions.”
  4. “Money borrowed among friends makes for wealthy lenders and poor friendships.”
  5. “Money doesn’t come with friendship, but friendship can definitely go with money.”
  6. “Keep your bonds of friendship stronger than your financial transactions.”
  7. “Loans borrowed, friendships lost.”
  8. “While borrowing might seem easy, repaying can strain relationships.”
  9. “Friendship and finance are like oil and water, they don’t easily mix.”
  10. “A $20 loan can cost you a 20-year old friendship.”
  11. “Borrowing from a friend often replaces the handshake of friendship with the handshake of obligation.”
  12. “Beware, a wedding can’t make a family but lending money can break one.”
  13. “Money loaned to a friend should be considered as a gift. Expectations cripple friendships.”
  14. “Marriages and friendships are too priceless to be risked by loans.”
  15. “Owing a friend may either cause borrowing guilt or repayment guilt.”
  16. “Borrowing from friends doesn’t just incur financial debt, but emotional debt too.”
  17. “A helping hand does not always have to come with a dollar sign.”
  18. “The lender might forget, but the borrower never does.”
  19. “Return the money, reclaim the friendship.”
  20. “Every dollar borrowed from a friend, carries a burden of silence.”
  21. “A coin borrowed can weigh more than a friendship borne.”
  22. “Turn friends into lenders, and feel the chill set in.”
  23. “The cost of borrowing is measured not in interest, but in friendship.”
  24. “Loaning to a friend is accepting the risk of losing both the money and the friend.”
  25. “Friendship based on money isn’t friendship, it’s business.”
  26. “A wallet shared is a friendship dared.”
  27. “Money can make friends and break them too.”
  28. “If you owe a friend, you owe a future favor.”
  29. “Friends and finance: dangerous if mixed, disastrous if shaken.”
  30. “While debts can be repaid, damaged friendships often aren’t.”
  31. “Borrowing money from a friend can be like stirring sugar in tea, it might make it sweet now but it can’t be separated later.”
  32. “The silence of debt is louder than the noise of friendship.”
  33. “Friendship forged in gold, can easily tarnish.”
  34. “The price of friendship can never be covered by borrowing.”
  35. “Count your blessings, not your loans between friends.”
  36. “Trust borrowed in the name of money rarely gets returned.”
  37. “Gold can be returned, but the golden time spent as friends cannot.”
  38. “Best not create debts where there should only be laughter.”
  39. “What starts as a loan may end as loss — of money, trust, or friendship.”
  40. “Friendships can survive storms, but often sink under debts.”
  41. “Finance may fail you, but friendships shouldn’t.”
  42. “Fools loan, friends caution.”
  43. “Money lost is often found, but lost friendships are rarely recovered.”
  44. “Appreciate the helping hand, not the handout.”
  45. “Friendship is too pure to be tainted by debts.”
  46. “The heaviest loan is that borrowed from a friend.”
  47. “When friendship and money mix, it’s the friendship that usually goes bust.”
  48. “Friendships aren’t about lending, they’re about spending time together.”
  49. “Count the memories, not the money borrowed.”
  50. “It’s easier to reclaim a loan from a bank than trust from a friend.”
  51. “Friendship isn’t a bank, so why make withdrawals?”
  52. “When friends become creditors, the credit of friendship is lost.”
  53. “Lend only what you can afford to lose – money or friendships.”
  54. “Don’t let financial transactions dictate the balance of your friendships.”
  55. “Don’t let the interest of a loan be disinterested in a friendship.”
  56. “Paid or unpaid, a loan has the power to redefine relationships.”
  57. “Friendship is irreplaceable, loans are not.”
  58. “A friend may not remind you, but a debt never forgets.”
  59. “Owing money is like an invisible chain that hinders the freedom of friendship.”
  60. “If friendship is priceless, why put a price on it?”
  61. “Love only asks for love in return, not money.”
  62. Don’t lend if you can’t lose; don’t borrow if you can’t return.”
  63. “Borrowing from friends is like playing with fire – you might get burnt.”
  64. “Borrow wisely, the cost may be a friendship.”
  65. “Borrowing money often comes with an added interest of guilt and stress.”
  66. “A friendship is much too precious to be collateral for a loan.”
  67. “A loan doesn’t just borrow money, it borrows peace too.”
  68. “The most valuable currency between friends is trust, not money.”
  69. “Equal parts money and friendship often make for a bitter cocktail.”
  70. “Speaking of loans among friends often leads to speaking in past tense.”
  71. “Debt can leave a dent in friendship, one that’s hard to mend.”
  72. “Money comes and goes, but strained friendships may never recover.”
  73. “Lend only when you wish to lose; both money and friendship.”
  74. “A loan between friends doesn’t just borrow money, it borrows comfort too.”
  75. “Mixing friendship with finance is like brewing trouble.”
  76. “A moment of borrowing can lead to a lifetime of regret.”
  77. “Don’t let the dollar sign become a sign of distress in your friendships.”
  78. “Never let the value of money outweigh the value of your friends.”
  79. “Money is just paper, friendship is golden.”
  80. “Once a loan enters, the value of friendship exits.”
  81. “Debts are like weights, they can easily sink friendships.”
  82. “Debt is a gamble in which friendship is often the loser.”
  83. “A friendship tested by money is a friendship tested too harshly.”
  84. “Repaying a friend’s loan is not just returning money; it’s restoring trust.”
  85. “Friendship and finance are a combustible mix.”
  86. “Before borrowing money from a friend, decide which you need most.”
  87. “Lend only what you think is fair; both money and trust.”
  88. “One surefire way to lose friends is to borrow money from them.”
  89. “A borrowed dollar often carries the weight of a lost relationship.”
  90. “Money changes hands; don’t let it change friendships.”
  91. “When we worry about repayment, we have no room left for enjoyment.”
  92. Debt is a heavy burden; don’t let it weigh down your relations.”
  93. “Borrowing from a friend is like borrowing a bit of their kindness too.”
  94. “Friendships are wealth; keep them safe from the risk of loans.”
  95. “Never lose a friend for the sake of gaining a loan.”
  96. “Money can be repaid, but the strain it brings to friendships can rarely be erased.”
  97. “To borrow money from a friend, is to put them in the position to be your lender.”
  98. “Friendship is a priceless bank where borrowing money should never have to be an option.”
  99. “To borrow from trusted friends is to walk a fine line between kindness and imposition.”
  100. “The heaviest debt is that of gratitude, especially when the interest is owed to a friend.”
  101. “To ask a friend for money is to risk trading their camaraderie for dues.”
  102. “Some debts are more profound than money, but none as taxing as those owed to close friends.”
  103. “Borrowing from a friend invites the banker into the living room of friendship.”
  104. “Those who value friendship over money will think twice before borrowing.”
  105. “Test the strength of a bond by borrowing, and you may find the broken pieces of friendship.”
  106. “Borrowing money from a friend can sometimes cost more than the repayment’s worth.”
  107. “Money comes and goes, but once a friendship is lost, it’s lost forever. Think before you borrow.”
  108. “When it comes to money, a friend’s kindness can quickly turn into an obligation.”
  109. “Loans between friends often come with an interest rate of discomfort and strain.”
  110. “A friend in need is hardly a friend in deed if the cost is paid with borrowed funds.”
  111. “Borrowing money from a friend is like planting a tree of distrust in the garden of companionship.”
  112. “To lend a friend money is to paint a ship meant for calm waters with the stormy colors of commerce.”
  113. “A wise man knows that borrowed money can dull the glow of the warmest friendships.”
  114. “To borrow money from a friend may equate to asking for outright contention.”
  115. “Borrowing from friends can build a wall of silence in the hallway of laughter.”
  116. “A chip in the crystal of friendship is often caused by the hammer of borrowed money.”
  117. Separate your friends from your finances; keep your human bank free of currency but rich in love.”
  118. “Loaning money to a friend is a test of friendship that few survive.”
  119. “Friendship and finance—two delicate items that are shattered easily.”
  120. “Money can’t buy friendship, but it sure can disrupt it.”
  121. “The moment money is lent between friends, the heart starts charging interest.”
  122. “Never test the strength of friendship with the weight of money.”
  123. “Money may not ruin friendship, but debt surely can.”
  124. “Friendship is priceless, and so it should never be priced.”
  125. “What makes friendship precious is its freedom—from counting, from constraints, from interest.”
  126. “Count your friends on your fingers but never count your money in front of them.”
  127. “Loaning to a friend: Mind says, ‘bad business’; heart says, ‘do it anyway’.”
  128. “Money passes, friends stay. Let not the former disrupt the latter.”
  129. “Money between friends can turn warmth into cold calculations.”
  130. “While borrowing, they are your best friends; while repaying, you are just one among many.”
  131. “Money changes everything—especially friendships.”
  132. “Lending money to a friend is like planting a thorn in your friendship.”
  133. “When a friend owes you money, it’s your peace of mind that waits to be repaid.”
  134. “Gifts shared between friends are priceless. Loans, however, have a clear price tag.”
  135. “Once a friend owes you money, every encounter becomes a reminder of debt.”
  136. “A debt unpaid is a friendship unmade.”
  137. “Owe a friend for lunch, not a loan. Make moments, not money-matters.”
  138. “When you lend money to a friend, you sign a silent contract that risks the friendship.”
  139. “Debt is the chains shackling your friendship.”
  140. “Lend a friend your ear instead of your money.”
  141. “The best kind of friendship is one that isn’t mortgaged.”
  142. “Never taint a good friendship with the dirty color of money.”
  143. “In friendships, ‘you owe me one’ should never refer to money.”
  144. “Forgiving friends for unpaid debts is a form of priceless giving.”
  145. “A friend may forget what you lent, but the lender rarely does.”
  146. “Debt-free friendships are the healthiest friendships.”
  147. Lending to friends is like mixing oil with water, it simply doesn’t mix.”
  148. “In the realm of friendship, credit scores don’t apply.”
  149. “Make an enemy, remember the grudge; make a friend, forget the debt.”
  150. “Keeping friendships and finances separate is a healthy boundary, not a stinginess.”
  151. “Better to borrow a friend’s time than their money.”
  152. “When you loan a friend money, you blur the line between friendship and business.”
  153. “Keep your friends close, and your mutual finances even closer.”
  154. “The ‘no interest’ in a friendship loan has a double meaning.”
  155. “A friendship loan might not charge interest, but it charges a whole lot of emotions.”
  156. “Blend money with friendship, and you get a bitter concoction.”
  157. “Money can be earned back; lost friendships might not.”
  158. “Friendship isn’t about ‘give and take.’ Especially when it’s about money.”
  159. “Strictly speaking, money doesn’t damage friendship; it’s the debt that does.”
  160. “In the dance of friendship, money is the awkward step.”
  161. “Refusing a friend’s loan isn’t about the money; it’s about preserving the friendship.”
  162. “The bank of friendship doesn’t deal in loans, but in trust.”
  163. “Friends don’t let friends borrow money—it’s a mess.”
  164. “Money borrowed is friendship hollowed.”
  165. “Unpaid debts to friends are reminders of a joy that once was.”
  166. “Friendship is the only thing you should be willing to lend and not expect back in return.”
  167. “A bond is formed when a friend lends you their book, not their money.”
  168. “Lending money to a friend is like throwing a pebble into the quiet pond of friendship. The ripples it creates may never settle.”
  169. “An untouched friendship is like an unsullied river: pure, clear, and free of debts.”
  170. “Money between friends should only be about treating each other, not treating loans.”
  171. “If your friendship had a credit score, let it be perfect by avoiding debts.”
  172. “Lending is risky, but lending to friends is riskier.”

Also see: 160+ Borrowing Money And Not Paying Back Quotes

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