A bridging loan is short-term secured finance arranged against property or land, designed to complete quickly and repaid within a defined exit period, typically between one and eighteen months. Unlike a standard mortgage, which is assessed primarily on income and affordability over a long term, a bridging loan is assessed primarily on the exit strategy: the means by which the borrower intends to repay the facility. Common exits include a property sale, a remortgage onto a conventional long-term product once works are complete, or the drawdown of a development finance facility. At Vsure Financial, we arrange regulated and unregulated bridging loans across residential, commercial, and mixed-use properties, working with a panel of specialist bridging lenders to source competitive terms and complete transactions at the pace the situation demands. Bridging finance is a powerful tool when used correctly. It is also an expensive one if used without a clear and deliverable exit strategy. Our role is to ensure the structure is right before you commit.
A bridging loan used without a clear, deliverable exit strategy can become one of the most expensive financial decisions a borrower makes. Monthly interest at 0.75 per cent accrues to 9 per cent annually, and if the exit is delayed, additional months of rolled-up interest compound on an already expensive facility. Borrowers who proceed without expert advice frequently overpay on the arrangement fee, accept rates above the specialist market, and discover too late that their exit strategy has a flaw the lender will not accept.
Your complete guide to Bridging Loans
How a bridging loan works and how lenders assess applications
A bridging loan is secured against one or more properties, either the property being purchased, an existing property in the portfolio, or a combination of both. Lenders advance a percentage of the property value, typically up to 70 to 75 per cent of the open market value on a first charge basis, though some lenders will extend to higher loan-to-value ratios with additional security. Interest is calculated monthly rather than annually and is typically rolled up into the loan, meaning no monthly payments are required during the term; interest accrues and is repaid alongside the capital at exit. Retained or serviced interest options are available on some products and can reduce the overall cost where the borrower has the cash flow to service the facility. The most important element of any bridging loan application is the exit strategy. Lenders require clear, credible evidence of how the loan will be repaid within the agreed term. A property sale requires evidence of realistic pricing and market conditions. A remortgage exit requires confirmation that long-term finance can be arranged on the property in its end state. Your Vsure adviser will review your exit strategy before identifying lenders, ensuring the application is presented correctly and the exit is deliverable.
Regulated and unregulated bridging: understanding the difference
Bridging loans are classified as either regulated or unregulated, and this classification determines both the regulatory framework and the range of lenders available. A regulated bridging loan applies where the security property is or will be used as the borrower's main residence, or the residence of an immediate family member. Regulated loans are subject to FCA rules and borrowers benefit from the same statutory protections as residential mortgage borrowers. An unregulated bridging loan applies where the security is a buy-to-let property, a commercial premises, land, or a property the borrower does not intend to occupy. Unregulated loans have a broader lender market, more flexible criteria, and in many cases faster processing times, but do not carry the same statutory consumer protections. The distinction matters: borrowing on the wrong basis can affect both the terms available and the protections you have if things do not go as planned. Your Vsure adviser will confirm the correct classification for your transaction and ensure the application is directed to appropriately authorised lenders.
Auction finance: completing within the 28-day deadline
Property auctions typically require completion within 28 days of the fall of the hammer, a timeline that conventional mortgage lending cannot routinely meet. A bridging loan is the standard finance solution for auction purchases, providing the speed of completion that the auction process demands while the buyer arranges longer-term finance if required. To secure auction finance quickly, lenders need three things: a clear and deliverable exit strategy, satisfactory security in the form of the property being purchased, and a borrower profile that meets basic creditworthiness requirements. Experienced bridging lenders can issue a decision in principle within hours and a formal offer within days of receiving a full application. Your Vsure adviser will prepare the application in advance of any bidding where possible, ensuring you enter the auction room with a credible finance strategy and the lender already briefed. Arriving at an auction without pre-approved finance and then attempting to arrange a bridging loan within 28 days is a high-pressure process that increases the risk of accepting inflated terms. Preparation is how you maintain control.
Bridging loan costs: the full picture before you proceed
Bridging loans carry higher costs than conventional mortgages, and understanding the complete cost picture before proceeding is essential. Monthly interest rates typically range from 0.5 to 1.2 per cent, which equates to 6 to 14.4 per cent annually if the facility runs for a full year. In addition to interest, bridging lenders charge an arrangement fee of typically 1 to 2 per cent of the loan amount, a valuation fee, legal fees on both sides (the borrower pays the lender's legal costs as well as their own), and an exit fee on some products. These costs can add several thousand pounds to the total facility cost and must be built into the financial model before the transaction proceeds. On transactions where the bridging loan funds a refurbishment, the cost of the finance forms part of the project cost, and the margin calculation must absorb it. Your Vsure adviser will present a complete cost breakdown before you commit, ensuring the numbers work and the exit strategy produces the financial outcome you are targeting.
YOUR HOME MAY BE REPOSSESSED IF YOU DO NOT KEEP UP REPAYMENTS ON YOUR MORTGAGE.