Guide
How Long Does a
Bridging Loan Take?
From enquiry to funds in your account. A realistic timeline for what to expect at each stage.
The Typical Timeline: 5-14 Working Days
The marketing says "funds in 3 days." The reality for most deals is 5-14 working days from first enquiry to money landing in your solicitor's account. That's still dramatically faster than a mortgage, but it's important to plan around realistic timescales rather than best-case headlines.
Here's what happens at each stage and why it takes the time it does:
Day 1 — Enquiry and initial assessment
You call or email us with the deal details. We need to know: what you're buying, the price, what deposit you have, any works planned, and how you intend to repay. Within a few hours we'll tell you whether it's fundable and at roughly what terms. If it works, we submit to the most suitable lender on our panel.
Day 1-2 — Terms issued
The lender reviews the headline information and issues an indicative terms sheet or decision in principle. This confirms the rate, fees, LTV, term, and any conditions. You review and sign to confirm you want to proceed. At this point the lender instructs their solicitor and books a valuation.
Day 3-5 — Valuation and legal work begins
The surveyor visits the property and produces their report, typically within 48 hours of instruction. Simultaneously, the lender's solicitor begins reviewing title documents, raising enquiries, and carrying out searches. Your solicitor should be responding to these in parallel — not waiting until asked.
Day 5-10 — Underwriting and conditions
With the valuation and legal work progressing, the lender's underwriting team reviews everything: the valuation report, your financials, the exit strategy, AML documentation. They may raise conditions — additional ID, proof of deposit source, or clarification on the exit. How fast you respond directly impacts the timeline.
Day 5-14 — Completion
All conditions are satisfied, both sets of solicitors confirm they're ready, and the lender releases funds. Your solicitor completes the purchase. For auction purchases this gives you a comfortable margin within the 28-day window.
Timeline by Deal Type
Not all bridging loans move at the same speed. The type of deal you’re doing has a significant impact on realistic timescales. Here’s what to expect for each product:
Quick Purchase
5–14 working days
The fastest product in bridging finance — a straightforward acquisition of a standard residential or commercial property. No staged drawdowns, no consent from other lenders, no complex valuations. If the title is clean and your documents are ready, these deals fly through. Many of our quick purchase completions land inside 10 working days.
Auction Finance
7–14 working days
You must complete within 28 calendar days of the gavel falling, so there’s a hard deadline. The good news: with a pre-agreed Decision in Principle and a solicitor briefed before auction day, the process compresses significantly. We strongly recommend getting your DIP in place before you bid — it removes the biggest risk from auction purchases.
Refurbishment
10–21 working days
The initial drawdown — the money to buy the property — takes standard bridging timescales. The additional complexity comes from staged build drawdowns, where the lender releases funds in tranches as work progresses. Each tranche requires a monitoring surveyor visit, which adds a few days per stage. The initial completion itself shouldn’t take longer than a standard purchase.
Capital Raising / Refinance
14–21 working days
Slightly longer than a purchase because the process requires redemption figures from your existing lender. Some lenders take 5–10 working days to provide these, and your new lender’s solicitor needs to review the existing charge before they can proceed. If you know you need to refinance, request your redemption statement early.
Second Charge
14–28 working days
The variable here is the consent process from the first charge lender. Some lenders process consent requests within days; others take 2–3 weeks and sometimes longer. There’s little you can do to speed this up once the request is submitted, so we advise getting the consent process started immediately, in parallel with everything else.
Commercial
14–28 working days
Commercial bridging takes longer for two reasons: commercial valuations are more complex (requiring analysis of trading accounts, lease schedules, and yield calculations), and commercial legal work involves reviewing leases, tenant schedules, and compliance documentation that doesn’t exist on residential deals.
Land
14–21 working days
Land valuations can be complex, especially for land without planning permission. The surveyor needs to assess hope value, planning prospects, and comparable land sales — which are less transparent than residential comparables. Land with full planning permission is more straightforward but still requires detailed review of the planning consent conditions.
International
21–42 working days
International borrower deals involve multi-jurisdictional legal work, enhanced due diligence under UK AML regulations, and overseas document certification (apostilled or notarised). If the borrower is a non-UK company, the lender’s solicitor needs to verify corporate existence in the home jurisdiction. Allow at least 3–4 weeks for straightforward cases, and up to 6 weeks for more complex structures.
What Speeds Things Up
The difference between a 7-day completion and a 21-day one is almost always down to preparation, not the lender. Here's what gets you to the faster end:
Clean title
Freehold, sole ownership, no restrictions, no disputes. The solicitor can get through their checks in days rather than weeks. Leasehold adds complexity — always.
Responsive solicitor
This is the single biggest variable. A good bridging solicitor turns things around in hours, not days. We recommend solicitors who specialise in fast completions — they understand that bridging deals don't wait.
Documents ready upfront
ID, proof of address, source of wealth, bank statements, company documents (if applicable), details of existing portfolio. Have all of this scanned and ready before you enquire. AML checks delay more deals than valuations.
Simple deal structure
One borrower, one property, straightforward purchase, clear exit. Every layer of complexity adds time: multiple properties, offshore SPVs, complex corporate structures, second charges, multiple parties.
Checklist: What to Have Ready Before You Enquire
The most common delay in bridging finance isn’t the lender, the valuer, or the solicitor — it’s chasing missing AML documents. Having everything ready before you pick up the phone can save 3–5 days. Here’s what to prepare:
Photo ID
Passport or driving licence. If you’re applying through a company, the lender will need certified copies for all directors and significant shareholders (typically anyone holding 25% or more).
Proof of Address
A utility bill or bank statement dated within the last 3 months. Mobile phone bills are usually not accepted. Council tax bills work well if they’re current.
Source of Deposit / Equity
Bank statements showing where your deposit funds are held and how they got there. If the money has come from a property sale, remortgage, or gift, have the paper trail ready. Lenders trace funds back to their origin — unexplained large deposits will trigger additional questions.
Company Documents (if SPV)
Certificate of incorporation, memorandum and articles of association, register of directors and shareholders. If the SPV was recently incorporated, some lenders also want evidence of the beneficial owner’s experience in property.
Property Details
Full address, asking price or agreed purchase price, estate agent details, and any marketing particulars or listing links. If it’s an off-market deal, a brief explanation of how you found it and the agreed terms.
Exit Strategy Evidence
An Agreement in Principle from a long-term lender if you’re planning to refinance, or evidence of comparable sales if you’re planning to sell. The stronger your exit evidence, the smoother and faster the approval. An AIP takes 20 minutes to obtain and can shave days off the process.
Existing Portfolio Schedule
A list of properties you currently own, their approximate values, and any outstanding mortgages against them. This gives the lender a picture of your overall exposure and experience. A simple spreadsheet is fine — it doesn’t need to be a formal document.
Proof of Income / Source of Wealth
Required for AML compliance. SA302 tax calculations and tax year overviews from HMRC, company accounts, or a CV and business profile explaining your career and how you’ve accumulated wealth. This isn’t about affordability — it’s about demonstrating your wealth has a legitimate origin.
What Causes Delays
When a deal takes 3-4 weeks instead of 2, it's almost always one of these issues:
Title issues
Defective title, missing documents, boundary disputes, unregistered land, restrictive covenants that need indemnity insurance. The lender's solicitor won't let these slide — and shouldn't. Each issue needs resolution before funds can be released. On older properties, title problems are common and can add 1-2 weeks.
Slow solicitors
Not all solicitors understand bridging timescales. A conveyancer who's used to 12-week mortgage completions will treat your bridging deal with the same urgency — which is to say, none. If your solicitor takes 3 days to respond to a simple enquiry, the whole process grinds. We always recommend using a solicitor experienced in bridging completions.
Leasehold complications
Short leases (under 70 years remaining), absent freeholders, non-compliant buildings insurance, service charge arrears, ongoing Section 20 notices — leasehold brings a whole layer of additional legal work. Budget an extra week minimum for leasehold properties.
Valuation discrepancies
If the surveyor values the property below your purchase price, the lender reduces their loan amount. You either need more deposit, need to renegotiate the price, or need to find a different lender — all of which take time. It's worth getting your broker's view on value before you commit to a price.
Incomplete AML documentation
Anti-money laundering checks are non-negotiable and cannot be shortcut. If the source of your deposit comes through multiple accounts, overseas transfers, or crypto liquidation, expect additional due diligence. Be transparent from the start — lenders are more comfortable with complex sources of wealth when you're upfront about them.
How Your Broker Affects the Timeline
A good broker can compress your timeline by 3–5 working days. That’s not a marketing claim — it’s the practical result of knowing which lenders have the fastest processes, which valuers turn around quickly, and which solicitors specialise in bridging completions. Here’s what that looks like in practice:
Pre-packaging your application
We submit your application with all supporting documents from day one, avoiding the back-and-forth that slows down many deals. Most brokers submit the initial enquiry, then wait for the lender to request documents one by one. Each request-and-response cycle adds a day. We anticipate what every lender needs and include it upfront — ID, source of wealth, company docs, exit evidence, property details — so the underwriter has everything in a single package.
Strategic lender selection
Some lenders have credit committees that meet weekly — miss Wednesday’s meeting and you’re waiting until the following Wednesday for approval. Others have delegated authority where a single senior underwriter can approve on the spot. For urgent deals, we target lenders with instant decision-making capability. We also know which lenders are currently quick and which are backed up — processing times vary week to week, and that real-time knowledge matters.
Solicitor recommendation
We recommend solicitors who specialise in fast bridging completions. This isn’t a kickback arrangement — it’s practical experience. A bridging-specialist solicitor turns around legal work in days, not weeks. They know what lender solicitors expect, they respond to enquiries within hours, and they don’t treat your 10-day completion with 12-week mortgage urgency. The wrong solicitor is the single biggest cause of preventable delay.
Parallel processing
We instruct valuations and brief solicitors simultaneously, not sequentially. While the valuer is booking their inspection, the solicitor is already reviewing title documents and raising searches. Every day saved in the process reduces your holding costs and gets you to completion faster. On a £1 million bridge at 0.75% per month, each working day costs roughly £350 in interest — so shaving 3–5 days off the process saves £1,000–£1,750 in real money.
Emergency Completions: Can It Be Done Faster?
Yes — in specific circumstances. We've completed deals in as little as 48-72 hours, but this requires everything to align:
What makes a 48-72 hour completion possible:
- Clean freehold title, already registered at Land Registry
- Desktop valuation accepted (lower LTV, typically under 60%)
- Individual borrower with straightforward AML profile
- Solicitor available and dedicated to the deal
- Lender with delegated authority (no credit committee wait)
What makes emergency completion unlikely:
- Leasehold property
- Corporate borrower (especially new SPV)
- High LTV (over 65%)
- Property with known issues
- Overseas borrower or source of funds
Emergency completions typically come at a premium — expect slightly higher rates and potentially a fast-track valuation fee. But when a deal is genuinely time-critical, the cost is justified by securing the opportunity. If you need an urgent completion, call us directly on 0330 223 7872 — email isn't fast enough for these situations.
Realistic Expectations vs Marketing Claims
Every bridging lender's website says "completion in 3 days" or "funds in 48 hours." These aren't lies — they're the best-case scenario on the simplest possible deal. It's the equivalent of a car manufacturer quoting fuel consumption under laboratory conditions.
In practice, the realistic timescales for a typical deal are:
Simple, well-prepared deal
7-10 working days
Average complexity
5-14 working days
Complex (leasehold, corporate, high LTV)
14-21 working days
We tell you the realistic timeline for your specific deal upfront. No false promises. If your deal can genuinely complete in 7 days, we'll tell you. If it's more likely 3 weeks because of the leasehold title, we'll tell you that too.
The best way to ensure a fast completion is preparation. Arrange a call with us before you commit to a purchase — we'll map out the timeline and identify anything that could cause delays, so you go in with realistic expectations and a clear plan. You can also use our calculator to get an instant estimate of costs while we work on your timeline.
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