HA Bridging Loans Hampshire

Property type: HMO

Specialist HMO Bridging Loans Hampshire

We arrange bridging finance against HMOs across the Hampshire student-and-professional-let market. Loan sizes run £200,000 to £3 million, terms 6 to 18 months, completions in 7 to 21 days. HMO bridging is unregulated investment lending; pricing sits 0.75 to 1.25% per month depending on conversion scope, planning position and the credibility of the BTL refinance exit.

  • Decisions in hours
  • Completion in days
  • £100k to £25m
  • Hampshire specialists

Hampshire · Hampshire

Bridge to your next move.

The asset class

What hmo property looks like in Hampshire.

HMO stock in Hampshire splits into two main groups. There is the student-let HMO market clustered around the University of Southampton, Solent University and the University of Portsmouth, typically four to seven beds in converted Victorian and Edwardian terraced houses across Southampton SO14, SO15 and SO17 and Portsmouth PO4 and PO5. There is the professional-let HMO market across Eastleigh, Fareham, Aldershot, Farnborough, Basingstoke and the Solent commuter belt, typically three to five beds serving defence, aerospace, marine and corporate workers. The C4 use class covers HMOs of 3 to 6 unrelated occupiers; larger HMOs require sui-generis planning. Article 4 directions apply in parts of Southampton and Portsmouth, which removes permitted-development rights between C3 and C4 and means full planning is required for any new HMO conversion in those zones.

Use cases

Bridging use cases for hmo assets.

HMO bridging cases in this market cluster around four repeat patterns. The first is buy-refurbish-refinance where a single-family C3 house is bought, converted to a C4 or sui-generis HMO with the planning consent in place, refurbished to HMO licensing standards, and refinanced to a specialist HMO BTL mortgage. The second is purchase of an existing HMO investment, often at auction, where the buyer wants to retain the let and refinance to BTL once the income evidence is established under their ownership. The third is heavy refurbishment of an existing HMO that has fallen behind current licensing and HHSRS standards, with the bridge funding the works and the refinance closing the loop. The fourth is capital raise against an unencumbered HMO portfolio held by a long-term landlord, typically to fund the deposit for the next acquisition. Article 4 makes the conversion case more complex in the central Southampton and Portsmouth student belts; we check the planning position up front on every case.

Hampshire context

HMO Market Across Southampton, Portsmouth and the Hampshire Professional Belt

Hampshire HMO demand sits on three strong drivers. The University of Southampton and Solent University together carry around 35,000 students across central Southampton, with the highest concentration of student lets in SO14, SO15 and SO17 across the Highfield, Portswood, Bevois Valley and Polygon areas. The University of Portsmouth carries around 23,000 students across its city-centre campus, with student lets concentrated in PO1, PO4 and PO5. The combined defence, aerospace, marine and corporate employment across Aldershot Garrison, Farnborough Airport, the Solent maritime corridor, the Basingstoke corporate headquarters and the Whiteley business-park belt generates a steady professional-let demand across the Hampshire commuter belt. Article 4 directions exist in several Southampton City Council and Portsmouth City Council wards, removing the permitted-development right between C3 and C4 and requiring full planning for new HMO conversions in those zones. Both councils operate mandatory HMO licensing schemes for HMOs of five or more occupants and additional licensing schemes in defined areas. Hampshire County Council and the borough and district councils across Basingstoke and Deane, Test Valley, Winchester, East Hampshire, Hart, Rushmoor, Eastleigh, Fareham and Havant operate their own HMO licensing positions. Bridging lenders familiar with the Hampshire HMO market price the asset confidently, particularly where the borrower has a clear planning position and HMO licensing pathway.

Valuation and lenders

Valuation and lender considerations.

HMO valuations come back on a comparable-evidence basis for single-family value, on a rental-yield basis for stabilised HMO income, and on a per-bedroom-rent basis where the lender's policy supports it. The most common BTL refinance exit is to a specialist HMO BTL lender pricing on rental cover at HMO income. Bridging lenders lend on the lower of single-family value and any defensible HMO investment value. LTV caps sit at 70 to 75% on stabilised HMOs and 65 to 70% on conversion or refurbishment cases. MT Finance, Octane Capital, Roma Finance, LendInvest, Hope Capital, Octopus Real Estate, Together and United Trust Bank all take HMO bridging, with Precise Mortgages, Kuflink and Aldermore stronger on the BTL refinance exit.

What we arrange

What we typically arrange.

A typical Hampshire HMO bridge sits at £250,000 to £750,000, 70 to 75% LTV, 6 to 12 months term, 0.85 to 1.2% per month, arrangement fee 1.5 to 2%. Conversion cases include a works tranche released against monitoring sign-off. Exit is BTL refinance to a specialist HMO lender at stabilised HMO income, typically at 9 to 12 months. We work with valuers familiar with the Hampshire student-and-professional-let market and with brokers on the BTL refinance side to package the exit alongside the bridge.

FAQs

HMO bridging questions

Does Article 4 stop HMO conversions across Hampshire?

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Article 4 directions exist in defined wards of Southampton City Council and Portsmouth City Council and remove the permitted-development right between C3 single-family and C4 small HMO inside those zones. Outside those zones, and across most of the rest of Hampshire, the C3 to C4 conversion can proceed without planning. We check the Article 4 position on every case before going to lender and work with planning consultants familiar with the relevant local authority policy where consent is required.

What rental cover do BTL lenders require on HMO refinance after a bridge?

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Specialist HMO BTL lenders typically require rental cover of 125 to 145% at the lender's stress rate. The exact requirement depends on borrower tax status, LTV and whether the loan is held in a limited company. We size the bridge so the projected HMO income at stabilised letting cleanly clears the BTL refinance test. Where the case is borderline, we work the borrower through the structure options before drawing down the bridge.

Can we bridge a heavy HMO refurbishment to upgrade licensing compliance?

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Yes. Heavy refurbishment to bring an HMO up to current mandatory or additional licensing standards is a regular case. The bridge funds the purchase at 65 to 70% of as-is value plus a works tranche released against monitoring sign-off for the licensing-compliance works. Once HHSRS compliance and licensing are in place and the property is fully tenanted, the exit is BTL refinance to a specialist HMO lender at stabilised income.

Tell us about the deal

Indicative terms within 24 hours.

A short triage call, then a sized indicative offer against a named lender for your hmo property in Hampshire or across Hampshire.

Regulated bridging on owner-occupied residential property falls under FCA regulation. Unregulated bridging on commercial and investment property does not. We are not directly regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, and we introduce regulated cases to authorised partners who carry out the regulated activity.

We respond within 24 hours. No automated drip emails, no chasing.

Next step

Talk to a Hampshire hmo bridging specialist.

We arrange short-term finance on hmo property across Hampshire, covering Hampshire County Council and the Portsmouth and Southampton unitary areas. Indicative terms in 24 hours.

Sister offices

Bridging desks across the UK property network.

We operate alongside specialist bridging desks across South East England and the wider UK property market. Each location runs its own panel, its own underwriters and its own market intelligence on the postcodes it covers.