The fine art lending market has grown substantially over the past decade, and the 2026 spring auction season — anchored by the $1.85 billion New York fortnight that Borro covered in the May 2026 luxury asset comp-set reset — has only reinforced the role of art as a financeable balance-sheet asset. A fine art loan is a secured loan in which the borrower pledges artwork as collateral. The mechanics follow the same path as any collateral loan: appraisal, secured custody, fixed term, return on repayment.
Which Works Hold Lending Value?
Blue-chip post-war and contemporary
Works by artists with deep auction records — Picasso, Warhol, Basquiat, Pollock, Rothko, Twombly, Richter, Koons, Hockney, Wool, KAWS, Kusama — and current market-active mid-career names form the strongest collateral. Comp sets are deep and pricing is transparent.
Impressionist and modern masters
Monet, Renoir, Degas, Matisse, Cézanne, Modigliani, Léger, Miró — long-established secondary markets, conservative but reliable lending characteristics.
Old Masters
Works with strong attribution, documented provenance, and recent market activity are accepted. The appraisal weight on attribution and authenticity is higher than in any other category.
Sculpture, photography, prints, and works on paper
Bronze editions by Giacometti, Henry Moore, Brancusi; photography by Sherman, Gursky, Cindy Sherman; prints by Warhol, Lichtenstein, Hockney — all accepted, with valuation reflecting edition size and condition.
What is less liquid
Decorative art, emerging artists without secondary market activity, regional or genre-specific work without national comp sets, and works with attribution or condition issues are accepted on a case-by-case basis at lower LTV.
How Borro Appraises Fine Art
The appraisal layers six inputs:
- Authentication. Catalogue raisonné inclusion, foundation authentication, expert opinion, signature, and any technical examination relevant to the artist.
- Provenance. Ownership history, exhibition history, publication record, and gaps in the chain of ownership.
- Condition. Conservation history, structural integrity, surface, frame, and any restoration.
- Comp set. Recent auction results for similar works by the same artist — size, period, subject matter, and quality tier.
- Edition information. For prints and sculpture, edition number, total edition size, and the artist’s practice.
- Market trajectory. Whether the artist’s market is appreciating, stable, or correcting.
Borro engages independent appraisers and, where appropriate, works directly with the relevant foundation or catalogue raisonné project to confirm authenticity before any loan is issued.
Typical LTV, Terms, and Rates
- Loan-to-value: 40 to 60 percent of appraised value. Blue-chip post-war and contemporary work at the higher end; Old Masters and works with attribution complexity at the lower end.
- Term: commonly 12 to 24 months for art, longer than most other luxury asset loans because art transactions and market cycles operate on longer horizons.
- Rates: priced in monthly basis points; competitive with other asset-backed lending.
- Fees: appraisal, climate-controlled storage, conservation reserves, and insurance are itemized.
The Process
- Inquiry. Photos, dimensions, medium, signed status, and any documentation. Borro provides an indicative range.
- Appraisal. The work is delivered via insured fine-art transport. An appraiser examines the piece in person.
- Loan offer. Written offer with amount, term, rate, fees.
- Funding. Same or next business day after signing.
- Storage and repayment. Climate-controlled, museum-grade storage for the term. On repayment, the work is shipped back via insured fine-art transport.
Fine Art Loans vs. Consigning to Auction
The borrower has two main paths to liquidity from a fine artwork: a loan against it or a consignment to auction. Each has trade-offs. A loan preserves ownership, avoids a taxable event, and can fund in days. A consignment monetizes the asset fully but locks in current pricing, takes months from consignment to settlement, and triggers capital gains. Borro covers the tax dimension in luxury asset loans and tax planning in 2026. For owners who expect the artist’s market to strengthen, who want to retain a piece for its position in a collection, or who need fast liquidity, the loan path is often more appropriate.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a fine art loan?
A short-term, asset-backed loan in which the borrower pledges artwork as collateral. The work is held in secure, climate-controlled storage for the term and returned on repayment.
How much can I borrow against a painting?
For blue-chip post-war and contemporary works with strong provenance and condition, expect 50 to 60 percent of appraised value. Older works, works requiring authentication review, or works in less liquid categories typically land lower.
Do you accept works without a catalogue raisonné entry?
It depends on the artist and the documentation supporting the work. Borro reviews each case individually and engages experts where necessary.
Will my work be insured?
Yes. Borro carries full-value fine art insurance on every work in custody, with coverage for transit, storage, and any handling.
How is the work stored?
In climate-controlled, museum-grade facilities with monitored temperature, humidity, light exposure, and security. Conservation specialists oversee the storage program.
Talk to Borro About a Fine Art Loan
If you are considering borrowing against a painting, sculpture, work on paper, or photograph, Borro’s art lending team can provide an indicative quote within one business day. Images, dimensions, medium, and any documentation are enough to start.

