Property type: Mixed Use
Mixed Use Bridging Loans Southampton
We arrange bridging finance against mixed-use property across Southampton, from the Ocean Village marina conversions and the Town Quay waterfront blocks to the high-street retail-with-flats stock along Portswood Road, Shirley High Street and Bitterne Road, plus the wider Hampshire mixed-use market. Loan sizes run £200,000 to £8 million, terms 6 to 18 months, completions in 10 to 21 days. Mixed-use bridging is one of the strongest-performing parts of the book; pricing sits 0.7 to 1.2% per month depending on the commercial-to-residential mix and the credibility of the exit.
- Decisions in hours
- Completion in days
- £100k to £25m
- Hampshire specialists
Southampton · Hampshire
Bridge to your next move.
The asset class
What mixed use property looks like in Hampshire.
Mixed-use property in this part of Hampshire usually means a ground-floor commercial unit with one or more residential flats above. The commercial use is typically retail, food and beverage, or small office. The residential element is typically two to six flats. Mixed-use also covers larger buildings with a mix of commercial and residential floors, retail-with-HMO conversions, and pub-with-flats configurations. Ocean Village marina-side conversion stock, where former office or warehouse floors have been turned into apartment-over-commercial schemes, also sits in this class. Each combination reads differently to a bridging lender. The income profile, the title structure, the lease arrangements and the planning history all drive the underwriting.
Use cases
Bridging use cases for mixed use assets.
Mixed-use bridging cases in this market run across five repeat patterns. The first is auction purchase of a retail-with-flats freehold where the buyer plans a refurbishment, lease re-gear on the commercial unit, and a refinance to term commercial debt. The second is purchase of a fully-let mixed-use investment from a long-term landlord, often as part of a portfolio sale, with the bridge providing speed where term debt cannot. The third is conversion play where a vacant or partly-let mixed-use building is bought and converted to a higher residential density, particularly common around Ocean Village marina, with the commercial unit refurbished and the upper floors converted to flats. The fourth is lease re-gear cases where the existing commercial tenant is being repositioned and the bridge funds the gap. The fifth is capital raise against unencumbered mixed-use held by a long-term landlord, typically to fund the deposit for the next deal. The asset class reads as more bankable than pure secondary retail because the residential element adds value-stability.
Southampton context
Ocean Village Marina Conversions and the Hampshire Mixed-Use Belt
Southampton mixed-use property is concentrated along the historic high-street corridors and across the waterfront regeneration zone. Ocean Village marina has seen a steady run of mixed-use conversions over the last decade, with former warehouse and office stock around the marina basin turned into apartment-over-commercial schemes that pair finance, marine and professional-services occupiers below with waterfront flats above. Town Quay carries a similar pattern at smaller scale. Portswood Road through SO17 holds a dense run of independent retail-with-flats stock, with strong student-and-professional residential demand above and stable independent-retail tenants below. Shirley High Street in SO15 and Bitterne Road in SO18 carry suburban high-street parades with retail-and-flat configurations on individual freeholds. Above Bar Street and Oxford Street through the city centre carry larger mixed-use blocks, often with retail or food-and-beverage below and conversion-potential or existing flats above. Bedford Place and the Polygon hold smaller mixed-use stock with food-and-beverage at ground level. Across Hampshire, mixed-use stock in Winchester, Romsey and the older market towns reads firmer; Eastleigh, Fareham, Havant and Totton sit at a similar value tone to Southampton. Lenders read mixed-use as a more stable asset class than pure secondary retail because the residential element holds value when commercial vacancy moves against the asset.
Valuation and lenders
Valuation and lender considerations.
Mixed-use valuations come back on a blended basis, with the commercial element valued on rent-and-yield or vacant-possession and the residential element valued on comparable evidence. Bridging lenders typically lend on the blended value, with LTV caps sitting at 65 to 75% on tenanted mixed-use investments with a recognisable commercial covenant, 60 to 70% on partly-vacant stock, and 65 to 70% on conversion plays. MT Finance, Octane Capital, Roma Finance, United Trust Bank, LendInvest, Hope Capital, Octopus Real Estate and Together all take mixed-use on bridging. Shawbrook, Allica Bank, Precise Mortgages and Kuflink are also active, particularly on the smaller end of the market.
What we arrange
What we typically arrange.
A typical mixed-use bridge sits at £300,000 to £2 million, 65 to 75% LTV, 9 to 15 months term, 0.7 to 1.15% per month, arrangement fee 1.5 to 2%. Conversion cases include a monitored works tranche. Exit is typically refinance to term commercial debt for retained mixed-use, refinance to BTL for the residential element after conversion, or sale to an investor. Completion in 14 to 21 days is normal where the title and tenancies are clean.
FAQs
Mixed Use bridging questions
Can we bridge a retail-with-flats freehold at auction in Southampton?
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Yes, and these are some of the most common auction cases in the book. We arrange the purchase bridge at 65 to 75% of the blended value, complete inside the 28-day clock using title insurance where the title has any complexity, and refinance to term commercial debt or split-title BTL after lease re-gear. The mixed-use blend usually reads more favourably to bridging lenders than pure secondary retail, which helps the case price competitively across Portswood, Shirley and Bitterne.
How do lenders treat an Ocean Village marina conversion with vacant upper floors?
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The bridge typically funds the purchase against as-is blended value at 65 to 70% LTV plus a works tranche for the conversion of the upper floors, released against monitoring sign-off at staged completion. Permitted development from Class E commercial above ground floor to C3 residential has shortened the planning route for many of these schemes. The exit is split between retained residential refinanced to BTL and any disposed units sold on the open market.
What rate range applies to mixed-use bridging in Hampshire?
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Tenanted mixed-use investments with a strong commercial covenant and a clear refinance exit price at 0.7 to 0.95% per month at 65 to 75% LTV. Partly-vacant or conversion-led cases price 0.95 to 1.2% per month at 60 to 70% LTV. Arrangement fees are 1.5 to 2%. The residential element of the blend typically makes mixed-use price softer than pure secondary retail, which is one of the reasons the asset class trades firmly at refinance.
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 mixed use property in Southampton 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.
Next step
Talk to a Southampton mixed use bridging specialist.
We arrange short-term finance on mixed use property across Southampton, the City of Portsmouth unitary authority and the wider Hampshire market. Indicative terms in 24 hours.