Property type: Leisure
Leisure Property Bridging Loans Sunderland
We arrange bridging finance against leisure property across Roker, Seaburn, Mowbray Park, the Hudson Dock waterfront fringe and the wider Tyne and Wear coastal-and-tourism market. Loan sizes run £250,000 to £8 million, terms from 6 to 18 months, completions in 10 to 21 days. Leisure bridging prices at 0.85 to 1.4% per month depending on trading position, refurbishment scope and the credibility of the exit.
- Decisions in hours
- Completion in days
- £100k to £25m
- Tyne and Wear specialists
Sunderland · Tyne and Wear
Bridge to your next move.
The asset class
What leisure property looks like in Tyne and Wear.
Leisure as an asset class covers hotels, guesthouses, restaurants and bars, gyms and health clubs, soft-play and indoor-leisure venues, and the small mixed hospitality-and-retail stock that lines the Roker and Seaburn seafront and parts of Mowbray Park. Trading-business value drives most of these assets, which makes the underwriting more like specialist commercial lending than vanilla property bridging. Vacant possession value, the alternative-use figure and the going-concern value can all differ materially. Bridging lenders typically lend on the lower of vacant possession value and going-concern value, with a haircut where the trading position is weak or the asset is materially specialist.
Use cases
Bridging use cases for leisure assets.
Leisure bridging cases in this market sit in a tight set. We see purchases of small hotels and guesthouses along the Roker and Seaburn seafront, typically £500,000 to £2 million, where the buyer plans a refurbishment and a refinance to term commercial debt once trading is rebased. We see purchases of restaurant and bar units coming out of administration where speed of completion is the price of getting the deal. We see capital-raises against unencumbered leisure assets held by long-term operators, often to fund the deposit for the next acquisition. We see change-of-use plays where a tired leisure unit is bought, converted to residential or mixed-use, and exited to refinance or sale. And we see development-exit cases on small coastal-leisure schemes where practical completion is reached and the bridge refinances the development facility while units sell out. Across all of these, lenders care about trading evidence, the operator's track record, and the exit. A vague trading projection kills more leisure bridges than any building issue.
Sunderland context
Coastal Leisure, Roker and Seaburn Seafront and the Wearside Tourism Economy
Sunderland leisure trades on a coastal-tourism base that has strengthened materially since the Roker and Seaburn promenade investment programme. Roker seafront carries the bulk of the small hotel and guesthouse stock, with a tighter cluster of food-and-beverage and self-catering apartments at Seaburn anchored by the Seaburn Inn and the seafront leisure scheme. The Penshaw Monument tourism draw, the National Glass Centre at St Peter's, and the wider naval-heritage and shipbuilding history of the Wear feed visitor flow across the calendar. Mowbray Park, the Museum and Winter Gardens, and the Empire Theatre form the city-centre cultural anchor, supporting hotel demand for both leisure and business visitors. Beyond the city, the Tyne and Wear and Northumberland coast carries an established leisure market running north through South Shields and Whitley Bay to Tynemouth, and the Northumberland coast at Druridge Bay, Bamburgh and Alnmouth supports a parallel rural and coastal holiday market within easy reach of Sunderland. Bridging lenders read all of this. Coastal leisure with a clear seasonality pattern, recognisable trading history and a credible operator behind the wheel sits comfortably at 60 to 65% LTV.
Valuation and lenders
Valuation and lender considerations.
Leisure valuations come back on a trading-business basis where the asset is going concern, and on a vacant-possession-with-alternative-use basis where trading is weak or interrupted. Bridging lenders typically lend on the lower figure with an additional haircut. LTV caps sit at 55 to 65% on most leisure cases, with the higher end reserved for hotels with strong trading evidence and the lower end for specialist or single-use leisure. MT Finance, Octane Capital, Hope Capital, United Trust Bank and Together all take leisure on bridging, with Shawbrook, Cambridge & Counties and OakNorth stronger on hotels and the larger end of the market. Trading accounts, RevPAR data for hotels and a clear operator narrative all help the case clear underwriting.
What we arrange
What we typically arrange.
A typical leisure bridge sits at £400,000 to £2.5 million, 55 to 65% LTV, 9 to 18 months term, 0.85 to 1.3% per month, arrangement fee 1.5 to 2%. Hotels and guesthouses price softer than specialist single-use leisure. Refurbishment cases include a monitored works tranche. Exit is typically refinance to term commercial debt, sale to a trading operator, or change-of-use exit to residential where the planning supports it. Completion in 14 to 21 days is normal; auction-style speed is achievable with title insurance.
FAQs
Leisure bridging questions
Can we bridge a small hotel purchase on Roker or Seaburn seafront?
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Yes. Small hotel and guesthouse purchases along the Roker and Seaburn promenade are a regular part of the leisure book. Lenders need trading accounts for the last two to three years where the business has been operating, a clear refurbishment and trading plan, and a credible refinance exit at stabilised income. Loans typically run 60 to 65% LTV on the lower of vacant possession value and going-concern value, with the works tranche released against monitoring sign-off. Refinance to term commercial debt is the most common exit at 12 to 15 months.
How do bridging lenders treat restaurant or bar purchases coming out of administration?
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Speed is usually the binding constraint and bridging is built for it. We have completed restaurant and bar purchases in 7 to 14 days from offer where the title is clean and title insurance is available. Lenders lend against the lower of vacant possession value and any defensible going-concern figure, with an extra haircut where trading has been interrupted. LTV typically caps at 55 to 60% on these cases. The exit is usually a sale to an operator or a refinance once the business is re-established and trading.
Does coastal-leisure benefit from holiday-let demand in Tyne and Wear?
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Yes. The Sunderland coast at Roker and Seaburn, together with the wider Tyne and Wear and Northumberland coastline, carries a growing short-let and holiday-let market. Self-catering apartment buildings, small B&Bs and holiday-cottage portfolios all see bridging cases. The underwriting reads more like residential-investment than going-concern leisure for the smaller stock, with rental evidence drawn from Sykes Cottages, Airbnb performance data and local letting agents. LTV typically caps at 65% on this sub-segment.
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 leisure property in Sunderland or across Tyne and Wear.
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.
Next step
Talk to a Sunderland leisure bridging specialist.
We arrange short-term finance on leisure property across Sunderland, the City of Sunderland unitary authority and the wider Tyne and Wear market. Indicative terms in 24 hours.