Guide
Bridging Finance for
Property Refurbishment
Buy below market value, refurbish, refinance or sell at the uplift. How to fund the full cycle.
The Refurbishment Strategy
The model is simple in principle: buy a property below its potential market value, carry out works to improve it, and exit at the higher value — either by selling or refinancing. The margin between your all-in cost and the improved value is your profit or equity gain.
Bridging finance makes this strategy viable because it provides the speed to acquire (often at auction or from motivated sellers) and the flexibility to fund both the purchase and the works in a single facility. Try getting a high-street mortgage to complete in 28 days on a property that needs a new kitchen and bathroom — it's not happening.
The key to making this work profitably is accurate costing, realistic timelines, and a clear exit strategy. The bridging loan is the tool that enables the strategy, not the strategy itself.
Light vs Heavy Refurbishment
Lenders draw a clear distinction between light and heavy refurbishment, and the classification affects your rate, LTV, and which lenders will consider the deal.
| Factor | Light Refurb | Heavy Refurb |
|---|---|---|
| Scope | Cosmetic — no structural changes | Structural — layout changes, extensions |
| Typical Works | Kitchen, bathroom, decoration, flooring | Extensions, conversions, new floors, underpinning |
| Budget | £10,000 – £30,000 | £50,000+ |
| Planning Required | Rarely | Often (especially conversions) |
| Monthly Rate | 0.50% – 0.75% | 0.60% – 0.95% |
| Max LTV (GDV) | 75% | 65-70% |
| Drawdown | Often 1-2 draws or upfront | 3-4+ staged draws with surveyor sign-off |
The classification isn't always black and white. A project that's mainly cosmetic but includes removing a non-loadbearing wall might be treated as light by some lenders and heavy by others. Your broker should know which lenders take a pragmatic view.
How the Funding Works
A refurbishment bridging loan typically covers both the purchase price and the works costs in a single facility. Here's how it breaks down:
Day 1 Advance
The lender funds the purchase price (up to their LTV limit) on completion. This is the money that actually buys the property. Typically 70-75% of the purchase price for light refurb, 65-70% for heavy.
Works Facility
A separate tranche ring-fenced for the refurbishment works. This money isn't released upfront — it's drawn down in stages as work progresses. The total facility (purchase + works) is capped at a percentage of the GDV.
Your Contribution
You need to fund the deposit (the gap between the purchase price and the day 1 advance) plus any works costs above what the lender will fund. On a £200k purchase at 75% LTV, that's £50k deposit plus any shortfall on works.
Interest
Interest is typically rolled up on the full facility amount. You pay interest on the purchase advance from day 1, and on each works drawdown from when it's released. No monthly payments — everything is settled when you exit.
Drawdown Schedules Explained
The works element of your loan is released in tranches — typically 2 to 4 draws for light refurb, or more for heavy refurb. The process works like this:
The Drawdown Process
- You carry out an agreed phase of works using your own funds or the previous drawdown.
- You request the next drawdown by notifying the lender's surveyor (known as a monitoring surveyor or QS).
- The surveyor inspects the property and confirms the works have been completed to an acceptable standard and in line with the agreed schedule.
- The lender releases the next tranche. This typically takes 3-5 working days from inspection to funds landing.
Budget £250-500 per surveyor visit. On a 4-draw schedule, that's £1,000-2,000 in monitoring fees. Some lenders include the first inspection in their arrangement fee.
A common frustration: you need to spend money on works before the drawdown reimburses you. This means having working capital available to bridge the gap between spending and receiving the next tranche. Factor this into your cashflow planning.
Understanding LTV for Refurbishment
Refurbishment lending uses two LTV measures, and understanding both is critical to structuring your deal correctly:
Day 1 LTV
The loan amount as a percentage of the purchase price (or current market value if you already own the property). This determines how much cash you need upfront. Typically capped at 70-80%.
GDV LTV
The total facility (purchase + works + interest) as a percentage of the gross development value — the estimated value after refurbishment. Typically capped at 70-75%. This is usually the binding constraint.
Some lenders will fund up to 100% of the purchase price provided the GDV LTV stays within their limit. This is possible when you're buying significantly below market value — for example, purchasing at auction at a 30%+ discount to the refurbished value.
The BRRR Strategy
BRRR — Buy, Refurbish, Refinance, Rent — is the dominant strategy for building a rental portfolio using bridging finance. Here's how each stage works:
Buy
Purchase a property below market value using a bridging loan. Auction purchases, repossessions, and tired properties from motivated sellers are the typical sources.
Refurbish
Carry out works to bring the property up to a lettable (or improved) standard. The works add value, closing the gap between purchase price and market value.
Refinance
Once works are complete, refinance onto a buy-to-let mortgage at the new, higher valuation. The BTL mortgage repays the bridging loan. If the new valuation is high enough, you pull out most or all of your original capital.
Rent
The property is now tenanted, generating rental income that covers the BTL mortgage. Your capital is recycled, ready for the next purchase.
The power of BRRR is capital recycling. If you buy at enough of a discount and add sufficient value through refurbishment, the refinance can return 100% of your invested capital — leaving you with a property generating income at effectively zero cost of capital.
Costs and Typical Rates
Current market rates for refurbishment bridging:
| Cost | Light Refurb | Heavy Refurb |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly Rate | 0.50% – 0.75% | 0.60% – 0.95% |
| Arrangement Fee | 1% – 2% | 1.5% – 2% |
| Valuation Fee | £500 – £1,500 | £750 – £2,500 |
| Legal Fees | £1,500 – £3,000 | £2,000 – £4,000 |
| Monitoring Fees | £250 – £500 per visit | £250 – £500 per visit |
Use our bridging calculator to model the total cost including all fees and rolled-up interest for your specific deal.
The Exit: Where You Make Your Money
Your exit route determines your entire strategy. The two main options:
Refinance onto BTL Mortgage
The BRRR exit. The BTL mortgage is based on the post-works valuation, so if you've added significant value, the mortgage amount can be high enough to repay the bridge and return most of your capital. BTL rates from 4-6% annual are typical.
Sell at the Uplift
The flip exit. Sell the refurbished property at its improved market value. Your profit is the difference between sale price and total costs (purchase + works + finance costs + buying/selling costs). Budget 3-5% for selling costs.
Whichever route you choose, have it planned before you buy. Lenders want to see a credible exit strategy at application stage. Talk to us about structuring your refurbishment deal correctly from the start.
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