What is a Due Diligence Check?

Breaking down the basics—what funders verify and how they do it proportionately.

By Plinth Team

What is a Due Diligence Check?

Due diligence confirms identity, legal status and risk so funds are used lawfully and effectively.

  • Register lookups and governance checks.
  • Policy and financial reviews where proportionate.
  • Clear records of findings and actions.

Core components

Start with the basics, add depth by risk.

  • Charity Commission/Companies House records.
  • Bank verification and key policies.
  • Adverse media and conflicts where relevant.

Key takeaway: standard steps keep reviews consistent.

Proportionate practice

Match checks to grant size and context.

  • Light checks for micro‑grants.
  • Enhanced checks for higher‑risk projects.
  • Document exceptions and escalations.

Key takeaway: Plinth automates routine checks with human oversight.

Communicating outcomes

Share clear, respectful results with applicants.

  • Required actions to proceed.
  • Reasons for declines where applicable.
  • Support routes and next steps.

Key takeaway: good communication speeds up decisions.

FAQs

Are checks mandatory?

Yes in practice; level varies by fund and risk.

Do checks delay funding?

Automation shortens timelines while improving quality.

Can we reuse diligence for renewals?

Yes—update only what has changed.