Hotel property finance for trading boutique hotels, branded operator-let assets and aparthotel acquisitions. Underwriting blends real estate metrics with operating-business analysis. CMB arranges hotel investment loans up to 65% LTV, owner-occupier mortgages up to 70% LTV, plus bridging and development finance for Reading hotels.
The market context that shapes how lenders price and structure hotel debt, relevant to every Reading acquisition or refinance.
UK hotel investment has stabilised post-pandemic, with operating margins in most categories normalising and trading volumes returning. The market splits into three distinct segments: branded operator-let assets (Premier Inn, Travelodge, IHG, Marriott) trade as long-lease investments at 5.5–7% yields; trading boutique and independent hotels are debt-financed against operating performance at 6.5–9% effective yields; budget and serviced-apartment formats sit between the two. Lender panel is narrower than other commercial sectors, most high-street banks finance branded operator assets but defer to specialist lenders on trading hotels.
Reading market signalThames Valley tech hub with major corporate occupiers. Elizabeth Line improves London connectivity. Premium office rents.
UK-wide hotel yield bands and the LTV envelope lenders are writing today. Reading sits within these ranges; specific yields move with covenant strength, lease duration and asset grade.
Best-in-class asset, strong covenant, long unexpired term.
Solid asset, average covenant, moderate WAULT, typical Reading mid-market.
Standing investment with let asset; ICR-stressed at typically 130–145%.
Trading-business mortgage; affordability driven by P&L not rent.
Three lender tiers price hotel property differently. Matching the asset to the right tier is the single biggest determinant of margin, LTV and execution speed.
Compete aggressively on top-quality stock with strong covenants. Slow on credit decisioning but unbeatable margins for the right deal.
Dominate the £1m–£10m secondary investment space. Faster decisioning than high street; willing to take view on assets the high street declines.
Bridging, refurbishment, vacant-to-stabilised situations. Pricier but execute in days. Where most hotel value-add plays start.
Branded operator hotels typically hold 25-year leases (often RPI-linked); trading boutique hotels are debt-financed against operating cash flow with no underlying lease. The two structures attract different lender pools, investment lenders for the former, leveraged-finance teams or specialist lenders for the latter.
The four most-used debt structures for hotel property in Reading, matched to the asset and the deal stage.
Investment loan against operator-let asset, 5-year fixed, 60–65% LTV
Trading hotel loan, debt-sized to 4–6x EBITDA, 60–65% LTV
Bridging loan for trading hotel acquisition pre-stabilisation
Owner-occupier hotel mortgage for hands-on operator-purchasers
Underwriters apply consistent risk lenses to every hotel deal in Reading. Pre-empt these in your application and the conversation moves faster.
Operating risk, trading hotel performance is volatile and lender-stressed
Brand risk, operator covenant strength matters; smaller chains get sharper underwriting
Capex cycle, hotels need £8–15k per key in cyclical refurbishment
Revenue concentration, leisure-only or business-only hotels see deeper cyclical swings
Operating licence and compliance, listed buildings, fire safety, accessibility
The questions we're most often asked about hotel property finance in Reading, with data-grounded answers from current lender appetite and recent transaction comparables.
It depends on the operating structure. Reading hotels let to branded operators (Premier Inn, Travelodge, IHG) on long leases are financed as investment property against the lease covenant. Trading boutique and independent hotels are financed against operating performance, a different underwriting lens that sizes debt to 4–6x EBITDA. We assess which structure applies before recommending lenders.
Operator-let Reading hotels reach 65% LTV with high-street and challenger lenders. Trading hotels typically cap at 60–65% LTV against valuation and 4–6x EBITDA, whichever is lower. Owner-occupier purchasers (operating their own hotel) can reach 70% LTV through specialist hotel-focused lenders.
Yes, but the lender panel is narrower than for branded assets. Reading boutique hotels in the 20–80 key range with 3+ years of audited trading accounts and stable operating margins are financeable through specialist lenders. We would review trading accounts, RevPAR vs market, and capex requirement before approaching lenders.
Yes, hotel bridging is a common play for Reading acquisitions where the asset needs refurbishment, rebrand, or operational repositioning before stabilising onto term debt. Typical bridging terms: 12–18 months, 60–65% LTV, with capex held in retention. Exit is usually a stabilised investment or trading-hotel loan once operational performance is proven.
Type-specific finance briefings for the other commercial property types we cover in Reading.