HA Bridging Loans Hampshire

Bridging finance across Hampshire and the wider South Coast

Bridging Loans Hampshire

Auction completions, refurbishment bridges, development exit refinance and regulated chain-break loans for buyers, landlords and developers across the full county. From the Solent ports of Southampton and Portsmouth through to Winchester, Basingstoke and the M3 corridor. Indicative terms within 24 hours, completion in 7 to 21 days.

  • Decisions in hours, not weeks
  • 0.55 to 1.5% per month
  • 1 to 24 month terms
  • Hampshire-wide coverage

Hampshire · Hampshire

Bridge to your next move.

24h

Indicative terms

7–21

Days to completion

8

Specialist lenders

Hampshire

Local market

Market snapshot

Hampshire bridging at mid-2026

The Hampshire bridging book sits across several distinct zones: the SO Solent belt covering Southampton, Eastleigh and Romsey, the PO ring through Portsmouth, Fareham and Havant, the RG24 to RG29 north Hampshire spine around Basingstoke, the SP Andover catchment, the GU corridor through Aldershot, Farnborough and Fleet, plus the New Forest fringe at SO41, SO42 and BH25. Price ladders, security mix and bridging use cases shift materially across them.

Transactions

37,325

Land Registry, last 24 months

County median

£330,000

Across all postcodes and property types

2024 to 2026 trend

-7%

Median price movement

Postcode areas

85

Live coverage across Hampshire

Top postcodes by median

Highest median sale prices across Hampshire.

  • SO42 £827,500
  • SO20 £615,000
  • SO21 £570,000
  • SO24 £570,000
  • SO23 £520,000
  • GU52 £500,000
  • SO22 £500,000
  • RG29 £490,000
  • GU33 £485,000
  • SO41 £480,000

Median by year

County-wide median sale price by transaction year.

  • 2024 £345,000
  • 2025 £330,000
  • 2026 £320,000

Stock composition

37,325 transactions by property type.

  • Terraced 26.6%
  • Detached 26.3%
  • Semi-detached 23.6%
  • Flat 19.3%
  • Other 4.3%

Three Hampshire markets, three reasons to bridge

Most of what we arrange in Hampshire falls into one of three patterns. Where the property sits on the map usually tells us which one.

Capital raise and second charge

SO23 BH25 SO41

Winchester SO23 prime stock and the New Forest BH25 and SO41 belt throw up the strongest median values in the county. We see capital-raise and second-charge bridges behind existing first-charge mortgages on Winchester period townhouses, New Milton coastal villas and Lymington harbourside cottages.

Auction completions

GU11 GU12 GU14

Aldershot GU11 and GU12 rental stock plus Farnborough GU14 ex-let terraces are the most common auction security in north Hampshire. Clive Emson, Network Auctions and Auction House South catalogue these areas heavily, often with garrison-tenanted units at modest lot sizes.

Chain break and downsizer

RG21 RG22 SO50

The Basingstoke RG21 and RG22 belt plus the Eastleigh SO50 commuter ring drive most regulated chain-break and downsizer bridges. M3 corporate relocations, Waterloo and Reading commuter pull, and a steady flow of upsizer activity into wider Hampshire keep the volume firm.

Rental and short-let demand stays underpinned by the University of Southampton, the University of Winchester, the Aldershot Garrison military payroll, Farnborough Airshow trade activity, the AWE Aldermaston technical workforce on the Hampshire and Berkshire border, plus tourism through Marwell, Beaulieu, the RNLI station at Lymington and the wider Solent maritime cluster. That demand keeps BTL refinance a reliable exit on tenanted post-works stock across the county.

Try the numbers

See indicative cost before you call.

Set the loan size, term and a monthly rate band. We will come back with sharper numbers tied to the specific lender and security once you tell us about the deal.

Indicative cost

Bridging loan calculator · Hampshire

Monthly rates between 0.55% (regulated) and 1.5% (heavy refurb / dev exit). Indicative only. Exact terms vary by lender, security and exit.

Monthly interest

£4,250

Total interest

£38,250

Arrangement (2%)

£10,000

Total at exit

£548,250

Exit via property sale on the open market. Excludes valuation and legal fees (both sides borrower-paid, typically £1,500 to £4,000 per side). Indicative APR equivalent 10.20% for context only. Bridging is priced monthly.

Lender panel

Eight specialist bridgers,
one packaging team.

We work most regularly with eight bridging specialists who cover the regulated, unregulated, refurbishment and development-exit markets. Beyond the headline panel we have working relationships with Shawbrook, Precise Mortgages, Allica Bank, Bridgebank Capital and others for cases that fit them better.

All deals priced against the strength of the security, exit, and borrower profile. Hampshire and Hampshire property is well understood across the panel.

MT Finance

Auction & speed

Octane Capital

Unregulated & complex

Roma Finance

Refurb & BRR

United Trust Bank

Heavy refurb & dev exit

Hope Capital

Speed & service

Together

Whole-of-market spread

LendInvest

Standard bridges

Octopus Real Estate

Commercial & dev exit

County coverage

Short-term property finance
across Hampshire.

The county runs from the Solent up to the M3 corridor at Basingstoke, west to Andover on the Wiltshire border, and east through Petersfield and Alton toward the Surrey line. We lend everywhere inside the ceremonial county boundary plus the two Solent unitary authorities of Southampton and Portsmouth, which sit outside Hampshire County Council but inside ceremonial Hampshire. The county carries some of the heaviest bridging demand in South East England outside the M25, driven by Solent maritime cluster activity at Southampton Port, naval and defence procurement at Portsmouth, the M3 distribution and tech corridor through Basingstoke and Fleet, and Aldershot Garrison plus Farnborough Airport at the northern edge. Winchester anchors the centre as the county town and the location of Hampshire County Council, Winchester College and the cathedral. The rural east through Petersfield and Alton runs into the South Downs. The New Forest fringe at Lymington and Ringwood supports a steady run of holiday-let cases, with Lymington a notable yachting harbour. Bishops Waltham, Whitchurch and Romsey are smaller market towns where period-cottage refurbs and chain-break cases dominate. The same eight-lender panel, the same packaging team and the same 24-hour indicative-terms turnaround apply wherever in Hampshire the security sits. We have run auction completions in Eastleigh, refurbishment bridges in Romsey, development exit refinance on a six-unit scheme in Basingstoke, and a Class MA office-to-residential conversion in Aldershot inside the same trading quarter. County-wide we typically see purchase-and-refurbish cases in the £200,000 to £900,000 band, BTL exit refinance on the full range of Hampshire postcodes, and a recurring flow of probate and chain-break work on owner-occupied homes across Winchester, Fareham, Fleet and Petersfield.

Southampton
Portsmouth
Winchester
Basingstoke
Andover
Farnborough
Fareham
Eastleigh
Read the Hampshire and Hampshire market report

Recent work

Three recent Hampshire bridging cases.

Client voices

Anonymised feedback from across Hampshire.

"Auction Tuesday, hammer fell at 11am, indicative terms back from the broker by close of play. We completed inside 16 working days on an Eastleigh parade lot with a service-charge quirk most brokers would have walked away from. Plain, fast, no chasing."

M.K. · SO50

Property investor, Eastleigh

"Our development lender was charging us to be there once the scheme was finished. The team had a costed development exit case with two lenders inside 48 hours and we moved across at 0.85% per month. Saved us six figures of interest over the sell-down period."

J.A. · RG24

Regional developer, Basingstoke

"We found the period townhouse before our own house had even gone under offer. Regulated bridging through their FCA-authorised partner, full transparency on the costs, drawdown 13 working days from first call. The sale of our place caught up five months later and the bridge cleared cleanly."

R.P. · SO23

Upsizing owner-occupier, Winchester

Talk to us

Tell us about the deal.

A quick triage call, then indicative lender terms inside 24 hours. No drip emails, no chasing.

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

FAQs

Frequently asked questions

How does a bridging loan work in Hampshire?

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A bridging loan is short-term lending secured against UK property, usually for 1 to 24 months. We agree a loan amount, monthly rate and exit route, take a first or second charge over the security, and release funds once valuation, legal and title are settled. In Hampshire we most commonly see bridges used for auction completions on Solent and Basingstoke stock, refurbishment-to-BTL projects across Eastleigh, Fareham and Gosport, holiday-let conversions on the New Forest fringe, and regulated chain-break cases for owner-occupiers in Winchester, Fleet and Petersfield. Interest is usually rolled up and paid on redemption rather than serviced monthly. Most loans settle in 6 to 12 months with redemption tied to either a refinance to a longer-term product or a sale of the security.

What rates can we expect on a Hampshire bridging loan?

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Regulated bridging on owner-occupied homes typically starts at 0.55% per month and runs up to about 0.85%, with LTV usually capped at 65 to 70%. Unregulated bridging on investment property, BTL and commercial security sits at 0.65% to 1.25% per month at 65 to 75% LTV. Heavy refurbishment and development exit cases sit between 0.75% and 1.5% per month at 60 to 70% LTV. Second charge bridging usually prices at 0.85% to 1.5% per month. Arrangement fees are typically 1.5 to 2.0% of loan, with legal costs borrower-paid on both sides. The same rate bands apply across Hampshire; postcode does not move the lender's price meaningfully.

How fast can a bridging loan complete in Hampshire?

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Indicative terms within 24 hours of submission is our standard. Standard completions run 10 to 21 days from offer. Tight auction cases on Hampshire stock complete in 7 to 14 days where we use title insurance and a streamlined valuation. Where the security has unusual title, a missing building regs sign-off, or a leasehold quirk on Solent flats, we may need 21 to 28 days for legal work. We give you a realistic timeline at the indicative-terms stage so the auctioneer or vendor knows what to expect, rather than promising a date we cannot stand behind once the legal pack lands with the solicitor.

What kills a Hampshire bridging case?

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Three things, in order. First, an unclear exit. Lenders price bridging against how the loan will be repaid, not just the security value, so a vague refinance plan or speculative sale can fail underwriting. Second, security with material valuation risk, such as structural defects on older Solent stock, cladding issues on city-centre flats, or planning enforcement on rural Hampshire conversions, can drop LTV below useful levels. Third, borrower credit events in the recent past, particularly active CCJs or recent insolvency, narrow the panel quickly. We triage these early so you do not waste application fees. Where the deal still works on a tighter LTV or a more specialist lender we will say so up front rather than chase a doomed case.

Can you fund auction completions on the 28-day clock?

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Yes. Auction completions are core to our Hampshire book. With the auction pack in our hands the day after the hammer falls we typically come back with indicative terms inside 24 hours from MT Finance, Hope Capital or LendInvest depending on the security. Completion at 10 to 14 days is normal where title insurance is available. We have run cases at Clive Emson regional sales, Auction House South and Network Auctions on Solent, Basingstoke and inland Hampshire stock at this pace, including residential lots, mixed-use parades and small commercial units.

Do you arrange refurbishment bridging with works drawdown?

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Yes. Light refurbishment (cosmetic, no layout change), medium refurbishment (some layout, no structural) and heavy refurbishment (planning, structural or change of use) are all routine. Roma Finance and United Trust Bank both support stage drawdown against quantity-surveyor sign-off, releasing tranches as works complete. Common Hampshire scenarios include buy-refurbish-refinance on terraced stock in Eastleigh and Fareham, HMO conversions in Southampton student catchments such as Highfield and Portswood (subject to Article 4 position), holiday-let conversions in Lymington and Ringwood, and period-cottage refurbs across Romsey and Bishops Waltham. Rates on refurbishment bridges typically sit at 0.75% to 1.5% per month depending on scope, with LTVs at 60 to 70% of gross development value rather than current value.

What is the difference between regulated and unregulated bridging?

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Regulated bridging is secured against a property occupied or to be occupied by the borrower or an immediate family member. It is regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Chain-break loans for owner-occupiers in Winchester or Fleet are the classic regulated case. Unregulated bridging is secured against commercial property, investment property, BTL or refurbishment stock. It is not regulated by the FCA. We do not hold direct FCA authorisation. For regulated cases we introduce clients to FCA-authorised partners who carry out the regulated activity. Unregulated cases we arrange directly.

What exit routes do lenders accept on Hampshire bridges?

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The four main exits are: sale of the security on the open market (typical for downsizer chain-breaks and probate cases), refinance to a BTL mortgage once works are complete and rented (typical for refurbishment-to-BTL on Solent and Basingstoke stock), refinance to a long-term loan against commercial security (typical for mixed-use bridges on Hampshire parade lots), and sale of a separate asset (typical for chain-break and capital-raise cases). Lenders want to see the exit named, costed and time-bound at offer stage. A weak or speculative exit will narrow the panel and push the rate up.

Are you a Hampshire bridging loan broker near me?

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We are a bridging brokerage covering the full county of Hampshire, the two Solent unitary authorities of Southampton and Portsmouth, and the wider South East England region. We do not have a public-facing branch on the high street. We work case-by-case with clients across all 20 of our named Hampshire towns, from Lymington on the New Forest coast through to Whitchurch on the Test, plus the city-tier markets of Southampton, Portsmouth, Winchester and Basingstoke. The 24-hour indicative-terms turnaround removes the need for a face-to-face first meeting. Where a site visit or vendor meeting helps the case we will come out to the property anywhere in Hampshire. Most enquiries start with a 15-minute triage call and an emailed information pack, then move straight to lender submission once you confirm the angle.

What documentation do you need to start a Hampshire bridging case?

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To package a clean indicative-terms request we need: the address and tenure of the security, your purchase price or current value estimate, the loan amount required, the proposed exit (sale, refinance, other), the target completion date, basic borrower identity and a one-line credit-history note. For refurbishment cases we also want a works schedule and cost. For auction cases we need the legal pack. For development exit we need the QS sign-off and a sales schedule. We can return indicative terms inside 24 hours on a clean pack and underwriting in 3 to 5 working days. Where the case warrants it we will instruct the valuer the same day as offer acceptance to keep the completion timeline tight.

Next step

Talk to a Hampshire bridging specialist.

Indicative terms in 24 hours. We work on most cases within Hampshire on a same-day enquiry response and complete in 7 to 21 days where the title and valuation cooperate.

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.