Guide
Bridging Loan vs Mortgage:
Which Do You Need?
They solve different problems. Here's when bridging makes sense and when a mortgage is the better option.
Side-by-Side Comparison
Before getting into the detail, here's the headline comparison. These are two fundamentally different products designed for different situations — if you're new to the concept, start with our complete bridging loan guide first.
| Bridging Loan | Mortgage | |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | 5-14 days typical | 8-12 weeks typical |
| Term | 1-24 months | 2-35 years |
| Interest rate | 0.40%-1.5% per month | 4%-7% per year |
| Repayment | Interest rolled up (no monthly payments) | Monthly payments throughout |
| Max LTV | Up to 75% (80% with additional security) | Up to 75% BTL / 95% residential |
| Property condition | Any — including uninhabitable | Must be habitable and mortgageable |
| Property types | Almost anything with a title | Standard residential and commercial |
| Regulation | Unregulated (investment/commercial) | FCA regulated |
When Bridging Is the Right Choice
Short-term finance isn't a substitute for a mortgage — it's a tool for situations where a mortgage either can't work or can't work fast enough. Here are the scenarios where bridging is the correct product:
You need to move fast
Auction purchases (28-day deadline), chain-break situations, or motivated sellers offering a discount for quick completion. When the opportunity has a time limit, bridging is the only option that moves fast enough. We routinely complete in 5-14 days.
The property is unmortgageable in its current state
No kitchen, no bathroom, structural issues, Japanese knotweed, short lease, non-standard construction — these all make a property unmortgageable today. Bridge in, do the works, then refinance onto a mortgage once the property meets lending criteria.
Short-term hold before sale
If you're buying to refurbish and sell within 6-12 months, a mortgage doesn't make sense. Early repayment charges, product fees, and the administrative overhead of a 25-year product for a 6-month hold — bridging is more efficient even though the headline rate is higher.
Complex or unusual assets
Mixed-use properties, land, commercial assets, properties with planning issues, or anything that doesn't fit a mortgage lender's standardised criteria. Bridging lenders underwrite on a case-by-case basis.
When a Mortgage Is the Better Option
Bridging finance is more expensive than a mortgage on a monthly basis. If your situation doesn't require speed, flexibility, or specialist criteria, a mortgage will almost always be cheaper over the long term:
Long-term hold, standard property
If you're buying a standard investment property in good condition and plan to hold it for years, go straight to a BTL mortgage. The interest rate will be a fraction of a bridging rate, and you'll have long-term certainty.
No time pressure
If the seller isn't demanding a fast completion and you have 8-12 weeks, there's no reason to pay bridging rates. Use that time to secure a competitively priced mortgage.
Residential owner-occupier purchase
If you're buying a home to live in, an unregulated bridging loan isn't an option anyway — we only arrange finance for investment and commercial purposes. A regulated mortgage is the correct product for your home.
Regulated vs Unregulated: Why It Matters
The distinction between regulated and unregulated finance is fundamental to understanding when bridging and mortgages apply — and who can arrange them.
Unregulated bridging: speed and flexibility
Bridging loans for investment and commercial purposes are unregulated — meaning they don’t fall under FCA (Financial Conduct Authority) oversight. This is not a loophole or a grey area; it’s by design. Commercial and investment lending is a professional activity between informed parties, and the regulatory framework reflects that. The practical result: faster decisions, more flexible structuring, fewer restrictions on property types, and the ability to tailor terms to the specific deal rather than fitting into standardised criteria. Lenders can approve deals in hours, not weeks, because they aren’t bound by the same affordability assessment processes that regulated lending requires.
Regulated mortgages: consumer protection
Mortgages on your primary residence are regulated by the FCA. This means mandatory affordability assessments, standardised documentation, cooling-off periods, and processes designed to protect consumers from taking on debt they can’t afford. These protections are important and appropriate for homeowners — but they also mean longer processing times, stricter criteria, and less flexibility. A regulated mortgage application typically takes 8-12 weeks from application to completion.
What we do — and don’t — arrange
We exclusively arrange unregulated bridging finance — for investment properties, commercial assets, land, and development. If you need finance for a property you live in as your primary home, you need a regulated broker, and we are not the right firm for that. This specialism is deliberate: it means every deal we handle is in our area of deep expertise, and every lender relationship we maintain is relevant to the commercial and investment space.
Unregulated does not mean unaccountable
The unregulated space is not the “wild west.” Reputable lenders and brokers operate to high professional standards — membership of industry bodies, transparent fee structures, clear terms, and proper legal processes. The difference between regulated and unregulated lending is flexibility and speed, not a lack of standards. You should expect the same level of professionalism and transparency from an unregulated bridging broker as you would from any other financial services firm. If you don’t get it, that’s a red flag about the firm — not the product.
Bridge Then Refinance: The Most Common Strategy
The vast majority of our clients use bridging and mortgages together. The pattern looks like this:
1
Bridge to acquire
Buy the property quickly with a bridging loan. Complete in days, not months.
2
Add value
Refurbish, convert, extend, or secure planning. Increase the property's value and make it mortgageable.
3
Refinance out
Remortgage at the new, higher value. Repay the bridge and often pull out your original deposit too.
This is the BRRR strategy (Buy, Refurbish, Refinance, Repeat) that property investors use to recycle capital across multiple deals. The bridging loan is the engine that makes the speed and flexibility possible. The mortgage is the long-term hold vehicle that makes the numbers work. We help clients structure both legs of the transaction — see our refinance page for more on the exit.
Can You Use Both at the Same Time?
Yes — and it’s extremely common. Many property investors have a BTL mortgage on an existing property and a bridging loan on a new acquisition running simultaneously. The two products complement each other perfectly.
Second charges behind existing mortgages
You can take a bridging loan as a second charge behind an existing mortgage on a property you already own, without disturbing the first charge mortgage. This is one of the most common ways investors raise deposit funds for new purchases. If you own a property worth £400,000 with a £200,000 mortgage, there’s £200,000 of equity. A second charge bridging loan can release a portion of that equity to fund a deposit on your next acquisition — all without remortgaging or altering your existing BTL mortgage terms.
Portfolio structures
Experienced property investors routinely have 5-10 mortgages across a portfolio plus 1-2 active bridging facilities at any given time. The products serve completely different purposes within the same strategy: mortgages for long-term buy-and-hold assets generating rental income, bridging for active deals — acquisitions, refurbishments, conversions, and developments. Running both simultaneously is not a sign of financial stress; it’s standard practice for anyone scaling a property portfolio actively.
Full disclosure is essential — and helpful
The bridging lender will want to know about all your existing commitments — mortgages, other bridging facilities, personal borrowing, and your overall debt position. Full disclosure of your portfolio is essential and a condition of any reputable lender’s offer. This isn’t a problem or a barrier. In fact, it helps: a well-presented portfolio of assets with equity demonstrates experience and financial substance. We help you present your full position in the best possible light as part of the application process.
The Real Cost Comparison
Yes, bridging finance is more expensive per month than a mortgage. At 0.65% per month, a bridging loan costs roughly 7.8% per annum — versus perhaps 5-6% for a BTL mortgage. Over 25 years, a bridging loan would be ruinous. Over 6 months, the calculation is completely different.
Consider this: you spot a property at auction for £300,000 that's worth £400,000 after a £30,000 refurbishment. If you take 12 weeks to arrange a mortgage, the property goes to someone else. The cost of not using bridging finance is the deal itself — a £70,000 profit opportunity lost.
Bridge: £225k loan, 6 months at 0.65%
Total interest: ~£8,775
Arrangement fee (1.5%)
£3,375
Total bridging cost
~£12,150
Profit after costs
~£57,850
The £12,150 in bridging costs enabled a £57,850 profit. Model your own deal using our bridging calculator, or talk to us and we'll run the numbers with you.
Common Misconceptions
Bridging finance carries more myths than almost any other financial product. Here are the ones we hear most often — and why they’re wrong.
“Bridging is a last resort”
No. It’s a specialist tool for specific situations. The best property investors and developers use bridging strategically, not desperately. They choose bridging because it’s the most efficient way to execute a particular deal — fast acquisition, short-term hold, unmortgageable property, or complex structure. Framing it as a “last resort” misunderstands the product entirely. You wouldn’t call a screwdriver a “last resort” because a hammer exists — they do different jobs.
“Bridging rates are extortionate”
Per month, yes — bridging rates are higher than a mortgage. But the comparison is misleading. A bridging loan at 0.65% per month over a 6-month term on a deal that generates £50,000+ profit is not “extortionate” — it’s a cost of doing business that represents a fraction of the return. The total interest on a £500,000 bridge over 6 months at 0.65% is £19,500. If the deal makes £80,000 profit, the interest is 24% of the gain. Compare like for like: total cost over the actual hold period, measured against the return the finance enables.
“Only desperate borrowers use bridging”
The majority of our clients are experienced property investors and developers who use bridging regularly as part of their business model. They have good credit, substantial assets, and clear exit strategies. They use bridging because it’s the most efficient tool for their specific deal — not because they can’t get a mortgage. Many could get a mortgage if they waited; they choose bridging because the opportunity doesn’t wait.
“Bridging is risky”
The risk is in the deal, not the product. A well-structured bridge on a good asset with a clear, evidenced exit strategy and sensible LTV is not inherently risky. A poorly planned purchase with no exit strategy, overly optimistic valuations, and maximum leverage is risky — but that’s true regardless of whether you fund it with a bridge, a mortgage, or cash from your savings. The discipline is in the deal appraisal, the exit planning, and the contingency provision. We stress-test every deal before presenting it to a lender, because a deal that doesn’t work for the borrower doesn’t work for anyone.
Frequently Asked Questions
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