Property type: Pub & Bar
Pub and Bar Bridging Loans Buckinghamshire
We arrange bridging finance against pubs and bars across Buckinghamshire, from the Chilterns village destination food-led pubs through the Marlow and Old Amersham gastropub stock and the Milton Keynes city-fringe wet-led locals to the Aylesbury Vale country-pub estate. Loan sizes run £200,000 to £4 million, terms 6 to 18 months, completions in 10 to 21 days. Pub-and-bar bridging prices at 0.9 to 1.4% per month given the trading-asset profile.
- Decisions in hours
- Completion in days
- £100k to £25m
- Buckinghamshire specialists
Buckinghamshire · Buckinghamshire
Bridge to your next move.
The asset class
What pub & bar property looks like in Buckinghamshire.
Pub and bar stock across Buckinghamshire splits into three groups. There are the destination food-led pubs in the Chilterns AONB villages, around the Hambleden Valley, across Wendover, Princes Risborough, Ivinghoe and the Hampden Forest fringes, which trade on Sunday-lunch business, cycling-and-walking tourism, and the affluent Chilterns spending base. There are the gastropubs in Marlow, Old Amersham, Beaconsfield Old Town, Gerrards Cross and the Thames-side stretch through Cookham and Bourne End, which trade on local catchment and event-driven flow. And there are the wet-led suburban locals across Milton Keynes, Bletchley, High Wycombe and the Aylesbury Vale fringes, which have seen the steepest closures across the last decade and are most likely to come up as change-of-use plays. Each reads differently to a bridging lender. Trading-asset value, vacant possession value and alternative-use value can sit a long way apart.
Use cases
Bridging use cases for pub & bar assets.
Pub-and-bar bridging cases in this market cluster around four patterns. The first is free-of-tie acquisition where a buyer is purchasing a pub from a pub-co or from a retiring tenant, with the bridge funding the purchase pending refinance to long-term commercial debt with a pub-specialist lender. The second is change-of-use to residential, particularly on the wet-led suburban stock that no longer trades, where bridging funds the purchase plus the conversion works. The third is refurbishment-and-reposition cases where a tired pub is bought, brought up to current food-led standard, and refinanced once trading is rebased. The fourth is capital-raise against an unencumbered pub held by an established operator, often to fund the next acquisition or to release working capital. Across all four, the underwriting reads through to trading evidence, the operator's track record and the credibility of the exit at stabilised performance.
Buckinghamshire context
The Buckinghamshire Pub Estate, from Chilterns Destination to Suburban Local
Buckinghamshire holds one of the densest destination food-led pub estates in the South East, an accident of its Chilterns AONB geography and its affluent Beaconsfield-Marlow-Gerrards Cross commuter spending base. The Chilterns villages around Wendover, Princes Risborough, Hambleden, Turville and Ivinghoe carry country pubs that have largely repositioned over the last decade onto a food-led, weekend-cycling and Sunday-lunch model. The Thames-side stretch through Marlow, Cookham, Bourne End and the Hambleden Valley carries gastropubs trading on Thames-Path tourism, rowing-club events and event-driven flow from the Marlow Regatta. Beaconsfield Old Town, Old Amersham, Gerrards Cross and Chalfont St Peter each hold a tight cluster of food-and-beverage pubs trading on affluent local catchment rather than tourism. The wet-led suburban locals across Milton Keynes, Bletchley, Wolverton, the Aylesbury Vale fringes and the High Wycombe estates have seen the steepest closures, with the most common exit being a change-of-use conversion to residential or small mixed-use. Pub-specialist lenders read all of this and price accordingly. The destination food-led country pub in Hambleden reads as a different asset class to the closed suburban local on a Bletchley side street, even though both fall under the same property type on a planning application.
Valuation and lenders
Valuation and lender considerations.
Pub-and-bar valuations come back on a trading-business basis for going-concern pubs, on a vacant-possession basis where trading is interrupted, and on an alternative-use basis where the conversion play drives the deal. Bridging lenders lend on the lower of the relevant figures. LTV caps sit at 55 to 65% on trading pubs with strong evidence, 50 to 60% on vacant or distressed stock, and 60 to 65% on as-is value where the case is a clear conversion play. MT Finance, Octane Capital, Hope Capital, United Trust Bank and Together all take pub-and-bar bridging, with Shawbrook, Cambridge & Counties and the pub-specialist team at OakNorth stronger at the larger end. Operator covenant, trading accounts and EPC position all drive the case.
What we arrange
What we typically arrange.
A typical pub-and-bar bridge sits at £350,000 to £1.5 million, 55 to 65% LTV, 9 to 15 months term, 0.9 to 1.3% per month, arrangement fee 1.5 to 2%. Conversion cases include a monitored works tranche. Exit is typically refinance to long-term commercial debt with a pub-specialist lender, sale to an operator, or sale of converted residential units on a change-of-use exit. Completion in 14 to 21 days is normal where the title and licence position are clean.
FAQs
Pub & Bar bridging questions
Can we bridge a pub purchase with conversion to residential planned?
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Yes, and this is one of the most common pub-and-bar cases across Milton Keynes, the Wycombe fringes and the Aylesbury Vale where wet-led locals have closed. The bridge funds the purchase at 60 to 65% of vacant-possession value plus a works tranche released against monitoring sign-off as the conversion progresses. We check the planning position up front with planning consultants familiar with Buckinghamshire Council and Milton Keynes City Council policy on community-pub designations and Asset of Community Value listings, which can affect the conversion route. The exit is typically refinance to BTL on retained units and open-market sale on disposed units.
How quickly can a free-of-tie pub purchase complete?
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Free-of-tie acquisitions from a pub-co or a retiring tenant typically complete in 14 to 21 days from offer. The binding constraints are usually the trading accounts, the licence-transfer position and the inventory schedule. Where trading evidence is good and the title is clean we can move faster. We work with licensing solicitors who handle the licence transfer in parallel with the property completion so the new operator can trade from day one.
What rate range applies to pub-and-bar bridging?
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Trading pubs with strong evidence, a clear refinance exit and a recognisable operator price at 0.9 to 1.1% per month at 55 to 65% LTV. Vacant or distressed stock prices 1.1 to 1.4% per month at 50 to 60% LTV. Conversion-led plays sit in the middle. Arrangement fees are 1.5 to 2%, with valuation and legal on both sides borrower-paid. Trading-business valuations cost more than vanilla property valuations and need to be factored into the deal cost.
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 pub & bar property in Buckinghamshire or across Buckinghamshire.
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 Buckinghamshire pub & bar bridging specialist.
We arrange short-term finance on pub & bar property across the Buckinghamshire Council and Milton Keynes City Council unitary areas. Indicative terms in 24 hours.