Retail property finance for high street parades, retail warehousing, shopping centres and convenience-led mixed-use. Lender appetite varies sharply by retail format, convenience strong, discretionary high street selective. CMB arranges retail investment loans up to 60% LTV, owner-occupier mortgages up to 70% LTV, plus bridging and development finance for Derby retail units.
The market context that shapes how lenders price and structure retail debt, relevant to every Derby acquisition or refinance.
UK retail has bifurcated by format. Convenience-led retail with grocery, pharmacy, food-to-go and quick-service-restaurant anchors continues to attract investor and lender interest at 5.5–7.5% yields. Retail warehousing with open A1 consent and strong national-brand tenants trades 6–7%. Discretionary high street, particularly in secondary towns, has seen yields widen to 9–12% and a sharply contracted lender panel, most mainstream banks now require value-add or change-of-use upside before they will write the deal. Investment lending on standalone retail is increasingly funded by challenger and specialist lenders rather than high street.
Derby market signalRolls-Royce and rail engineering anchor industrial sector. University driving student demand. City centre transformation ongoing.
UK-wide retail yield bands and the LTV envelope lenders are writing today. Derby 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 Derby 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 retail 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 retail value-add plays start.
Anchor-led retail holds 10–25 year FRI leases with 5-year reviews; secondary high street commonly runs 5–10 year terms with break options. Lenders price WAULT-to-break heavily, sub-3-year unexpired terms compress LTV materially.
Recent retail sales in Derby sourced from HM Land Registry Price Paid Data. Use these as comparables when benchmarking valuations or pitching a lender.
12, Market Place, Kegworth, Derby
7, North Parade, Derby
Source: HM Land Registry Price Paid Data, Cat B records, rolling 60 months.
The four most-used debt structures for retail property in Derby, matched to the asset and the deal stage.
Term investment loan, 5-year fixed, 55–60% LTV on standing investment
Bridging loan for value-add retail acquisition with change-of-use angle
Owner-occupier commercial mortgage for retailer-owned trading premises
Refurbishment finance for parade modernisation or retail-to-mixed-use conversion
Underwriters apply consistent risk lenses to every retail deal in Derby. Pre-empt these in your application and the conversation moves faster.
WAULT to break, many retail leases have early breaks that compress LTV
Tenant covenant, discretionary retailers have higher CVA/insolvency exposure
Format risk, secondary high street faces structural footfall decline
Business rates revaluation cycle, retailer cost base shifts can pressure rents
Change-of-use planning risk for retail-to-resi conversion plays
The questions we're most often asked about retail property finance in Derby, with data-grounded answers from current lender appetite and recent transaction comparables.
Convenience-led retail in Derby with grocery or food-to-go anchors and 5+ years unexpired term reaches 60% LTV on competitive terms. Discretionary high street with shorter WAULT typically caps at 50–55% LTV and prices 100–150bps wider. Owner-occupier retail mortgages reach 70% LTV.
Yes, but underwriting depends on tenant mix. Derby parades with grocery, pharmacy or QSR anchors are well-supported by challenger lenders. Discretionary independent-only parades face a thinner lender panel and lower LTV, often the deal works better as a value-add bridging play targeting refurbishment and re-letting.
Larger shopping centres are now mostly financed by specialist or institutional debt funds rather than mainstream commercial banks. Smaller community-scale centres with grocery anchors and stable income remain bankable through challenger lenders. We would assess viability on tenant mix, WAULT, capex liability and management requirement before recommending a debt structure.
Retail-to-residential is one of the most active value-add plays in Derby. We arrange bridging loans for the acquisition, development finance for the conversion (often under permitted development rights for upper floors), and longer-term investment debt on the stabilised mixed-use scheme. Typical bridging LTV: 65–70% of day-one value with capex held in retention.
Type-specific finance briefings for the other commercial property types we cover in Derby.