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UK property — bridging finance for investment, development and commercial projects

Glossary

Bridging Finance
Without the Jargon.

Every term you need to understand, explained in plain English. No waffle, no unnecessary complexity — just clear definitions from people who arrange bridging finance every day.

A

Arrangement Fee

A fee charged by the lender to set up the bridging facility, typically 1-2% of the loan amount. Paid on completion, sometimes deducted from the advance.

Asset-Based Lending

Lending decisions based primarily on the value and quality of the property being offered as security, rather than the borrower's income or credit history. Most bridging finance is asset-based.

Adverse Credit

A borrower's credit history that includes CCJs, defaults, missed payments, or previous insolvency. Many specialist bridging lenders can accommodate adverse credit.

B

Bridging Loan

A short-term, property-secured loan designed to "bridge the gap" between a financial need and a longer-term solution. Typically repaid within 1-24 months through sale, refinance, or other capital.

Broker Fee

The fee charged by a bridging finance broker for arranging the loan. Typically 1% of the loan amount, payable on completion.

Buy-to-Let (BTL)

A property purchased specifically to be rented out to tenants. BTL properties are commonly used as security for bridging loans and as a refinance exit strategy.

C

Capital Raising

Using an existing property as security to borrow funds for any purpose — purchasing another asset, funding works, or releasing equity for business use.

Charge (First / Second)

A legal claim registered against a property as security for a loan. A first charge has priority over all other claims. A second charge sits behind the first and is repaid after the first charge lender.

Completion

The point at which the loan is finalised, funds are released, and the legal charge is registered. In bridging, completion can happen in as little as 5-14 days.

Cross-Collateralisation

Using more than one property as security for a single loan. This can increase the amount available to borrow or secure a lower interest rate by reducing the lender's risk.

D

Day-One Advance

The net amount of money released to the borrower on completion day, after deduction of fees and any retained interest.

Default Interest

A higher rate of interest applied if the borrower fails to repay the loan by the agreed term end date. Typically significantly higher than the standard rate.

Development Exit

A bridging loan used to refinance out of a development finance facility, typically once construction is complete but before all units are sold.

Drawdown

The release of loan funds. In bridging, this usually happens as a single lump sum on completion. In development finance, funds are drawn in stages (tranches).

E

Equity

The difference between a property's market value and any outstanding debt secured against it. Equity can be used as a deposit or as security for additional borrowing.

Exit Fee

A fee charged by some lenders when the loan is repaid (also called a redemption fee). Typically 0-1% of the loan amount. Many lenders on our panel offer zero exit fee products.

Exit Strategy

The borrower's plan for repaying the bridging loan. Common exits include sale of the property, refinance onto a longer-term product, or repayment from other capital. Every bridging loan requires a credible exit.

F

Facility Letter

The formal loan offer document from the lender, detailing the loan amount, interest rate, term, fees, conditions, and security requirements.

First Charge

The primary legal claim against a property. The first charge lender has priority in the event of a sale or default. First charge bridging loans typically offer lower rates than second charge.

Fixed Rate

An interest rate that stays the same throughout the loan term, giving certainty on costs. Most bridging loans are fixed rate.

G

Gazumping

When a seller accepts a higher offer from another buyer after already accepting yours. Bridging finance can help prevent this by enabling faster completion.

Gross Loan

The total loan amount before any deductions. The net loan (day-one advance) will be lower after arrangement fees and any retained interest are deducted.

Guarantee (Personal)

A personal commitment by the borrower or company director to repay the loan if the property security is insufficient. Some lenders offer non-recourse (no PG) options.

H

HMO (House in Multiple Occupation)

A property rented to three or more tenants forming two or more separate households, sharing facilities. HMOs require specific licencing and specialist finance.

Heavy Refurbishment

Renovation works that involve structural changes, extensions, or change of use — as opposed to light refurbishment (cosmetic improvements). Heavy refurb typically requires higher LTV and specialist lenders.

I

Interest (Rolled Up / Retained / Serviced)

The three ways bridging interest can be structured. Rolled up: added to the loan and repaid at the end. Retained: deducted from the advance upfront. Serviced: paid monthly like a mortgage.

Intercreditor Agreement

A legal agreement between a first charge lender and a second charge (or mezzanine) lender, setting out the priority of their respective claims and how proceeds are distributed.

J

Joint Venture (JV)

A partnership between two or more parties to undertake a property project, typically combining capital, expertise, or land. JV structures can be funded with bridging finance.

K

Key Undertakings

Conditions in a facility letter that the borrower must fulfil — either before drawdown (conditions precedent) or during the loan term (ongoing covenants).

L

Land with Planning

Land that has been granted planning permission for development. Easier to finance and typically attracts lower rates than land without planning.

Land without Planning

Land where no planning permission has been granted. Higher risk for lenders, but specialist funders will consider it — particularly for strategic land plays.

Legal Charge

The formal registration of a lender's security interest against a property at the Land Registry. Gives the lender the right to take possession if the borrower defaults.

Light Refurbishment

Cosmetic renovation works that don't involve structural changes — new kitchen, bathroom, redecoration, new flooring. Easier to fund than heavy refurb.

Loan-to-Value (LTV)

The loan amount expressed as a percentage of the property's value. A £750,000 loan on a £1m property is 75% LTV. Lower LTV generally means better rates.

Loan-to-GDV

The loan amount expressed as a percentage of the property's Gross Development Value — what it will be worth after works are completed. Used in development and heavy refurbishment lending.

M

Mezzanine Finance

A layer of funding that sits between senior debt (first charge) and the borrower's equity. Allows developers to borrow up to 85-90% of costs. Higher rates but can unlock otherwise unviable projects.

Monthly Interest Rate

Bridging loan interest is quoted as a monthly percentage (e.g. 0.75% per month) rather than annually. To compare with annual products, multiply by 12.

N

Net Loan

The actual amount received by the borrower on day one, after deduction of arrangement fees and any retained interest from the gross loan.

Non-Recourse Lending

Lending where the lender's only recourse in the event of default is the property itself — no personal guarantee from the borrower.

O

Open Bridge

A bridging loan where the borrower does not have a fixed repayment date or confirmed exit. Harder to obtain and more expensive than a closed bridge with a defined exit.

Offer Letter

See Facility Letter. The formal document from the lender setting out all terms and conditions of the loan.

P

Planning Permission

Formal approval from the local authority to carry out building works or change of use. A key factor in land and development lending.

Pre-Approval

An indicative lending decision before full underwriting, giving the borrower confidence to proceed. Particularly useful for auction purchases.

Procuration Fee

A fee paid by the lender to the broker for introducing the business. This is separate from and in addition to the broker fee paid by the borrower.

Property Development Finance

Specialist lending for ground-up construction or heavy refurbishment projects, typically with staged drawdowns. Different from bridging but often used in sequence.

Q

Quick Purchase

A bridging loan arranged at speed for time-sensitive acquisitions — auction purchases, chain breaks, or off-market opportunities requiring fast completion.

R

Redemption

The repayment and closure of a bridging loan. On redemption, the legal charge is removed from the property.

Refinance

Replacing an existing loan with a new one — either to secure better terms, release equity, or as an exit strategy from a bridging facility.

Regulated Bridging

A bridging loan secured against a property the borrower lives in as their primary home, regulated by the FCA. bridging.fund specialises in unregulated bridging only.

Retained Interest

Interest deducted from the loan advance upfront and held by the lender. If the loan is repaid early, unused retained interest is typically refunded.

Rolled Up Interest

Interest added to the loan balance during the term and repaid as a lump sum at exit. No monthly payments required — the most common structure for commercial bridging.

S

Second Charge

A loan secured against a property that already has a first charge mortgage or loan. The second charge lender is repaid after the first charge lender. Rates are higher but it avoids disturbing the existing facility.

Secured Lending

Any loan where property or another asset is offered as collateral. All bridging loans are secured against property.

Senior Debt

The primary (first charge) loan on a property. In a capital stack, senior debt has the highest priority and lowest risk, so attracts the lowest rate.

Serviced Interest

Interest paid monthly by the borrower during the loan term, like a traditional mortgage. Less common in bridging than rolled up interest.

Short-Term Finance

Any lending facility with a term of up to 24 months. Bridging loans are the most common form of short-term property finance.

Standing Asset

An existing, income-producing or habitable property — as opposed to a development site or land. Standing asset bridging is lower risk for lenders.

T

Term

The agreed duration of the bridging loan, typically 1-24 months. Shorter terms generally mean lower total cost if the exit strategy is delivered on time.

Title Insurance

Insurance that protects the lender against defects in the property's legal title. Can speed up completion by removing the need for lengthy title investigations.

Total Cost of Borrowing

The all-in cost of a bridging loan including interest, arrangement fee, exit fee, valuation, legal fees, and broker fee. Always compare total cost, not just the headline rate.

Tranche

A portion of a loan drawn down separately. In development finance, funds are released in tranches as construction milestones are met.

U

Unregulated Bridging

Bridging loans secured against property that is not the borrower's primary home — commercial, investment, land, or development sites. Not subject to FCA regulation, allowing greater speed and flexibility.

Underwriting

The lender's process of assessing a loan application — evaluating the property, borrower, exit strategy, and risk before issuing a formal offer.

V

Valuation

A professional assessment of a property's market value, carried out by a RICS-qualified surveyor and required by the lender before funds can be released.

Variable Rate

An interest rate that can change during the loan term, usually linked to a base rate. Less common in bridging than fixed rates.

W

Waiver

A lender's agreement to set aside a specific condition or requirement — for example, waiving a condition precedent to allow faster completion.

Working Capital

Funds used for day-to-day business operations. Bridging loans can provide working capital when secured against commercial property.

Z

Zero Exit Fee

A bridging loan with no fee charged on redemption. Many lenders on our panel offer zero exit fee products, reducing the total cost of borrowing.

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