Finance for buildings combining commercial ground floors with residential upper floors, the dominant deal format in UK secondary markets and the engine of corporate-acquired property activity. CMB arranges mixed-use investment loans up to 70% LTV, owner-occupier mortgages up to 75% LTV, plus bridging and development finance for Leicester mixed-use buildings.
The market context that shapes how lenders price and structure mixed-use debt, relevant to every Leicester acquisition or refinance.
Mixed-use buildings, typically a commercial ground floor (retail, office or A3) with one to four residential flats above, represent the highest-volume commercial property deal type in the UK. Land Registry Cat B records show mixed-use as the dominant SPV-acquisition format, particularly in London zones 2–6 and regional city centres. Lender appetite is broad but selective: lenders prefer the commercial-to-residential split to lean residential (75%+ of value) for the most competitive pricing, and look for self-contained access for the residential element.
Leicester market signalTwo universities drive exceptional student market. Cultural Quarter established. Richard III tourism boost.
UK-wide mixed-use yield bands and the LTV envelope lenders are writing today. Leicester 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 Leicester 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 mixed-use 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 mixed-use value-add plays start.
Commercial element typically holds 5–15 year FRI leases, residential element commonly let on AST or short-let arrangements. Lenders treat the two income streams differently: commercial rent must clear ICR thresholds independently, residential income is stress-tested at 145% ICR with rate buffers.
Recent mixed-use sales in Leicester sourced from HM Land Registry Price Paid Data. Use these as comparables when benchmarking valuations or pitching a lender.
The Brocky Farm House, Kirkby Road, Barwell, Leicester
Source: HM Land Registry Price Paid Data, Cat B records, rolling 60 months.
The four most-used debt structures for mixed-use property in Leicester, matched to the asset and the deal stage.
Term investment loan covering both commercial and residential elements, 5-year fixed
SPV-held semi-commercial loan, 65–70% LTV, ICR-stressed
Bridging loan for vacant or part-vacant acquisition pre-stabilisation
Refurbishment finance to upgrade flats or convert ground-floor use class
Underwriters apply consistent risk lenses to every mixed-use deal in Leicester. Pre-empt these in your application and the conversation moves faster.
Rent split, heavily commercial-led mixed-use has fewer lender options
Access, shared access between commercial and residential reduces lender appetite
Commercial covenant, independent ground-floor tenants get fuller underwriting
Fire safety / EWS, post-Grenfell requirements apply to residential element
Self-management vs managed, lender preferences vary
The questions we're most often asked about mixed-use property finance in Leicester, with data-grounded answers from current lender appetite and recent transaction comparables.
A mixed-use property typically has a commercial ground floor (retail, office or restaurant) with residential flats above. Leicester mixed-use is one of the most common SPV acquisition formats. Finance is available through challenger banks (Allica, Aldermore, Shawbrook) and specialist lenders, typically at 65–70% LTV against the combined value.
No. Standard residential mortgages exclude commercial elements. Leicester mixed-use property requires a semi-commercial mortgage (covering both elements) or a commercial investment loan, both of which are stress-tested differently from residential and held in an SPV in most cases.
Lenders typically commission a single valuation reflecting both elements, then stress-test the income streams independently, commercial income against ICR thresholds (130–140%), residential income against AST market rent at 145% ICR and a 5–7% stressed rate. The lower of the two bottlenecks the LTV.
Yes, bridging is a common acquisition route for Leicester mixed-use, particularly where the building is part-vacant, needs refurbishment, or is being acquired at auction. Typical terms: 12 months, 65–70% LTV against day-one value, with exit onto a term commercial mortgage post-stabilisation.
Type-specific finance briefings for the other commercial property types we cover in Leicester.