What Counts as Non-Standard Construction Property?
A property falls into the non-standard construction category when it uses materials or methods that deviate from conventional brick or block walls with a slate or tile roof. Bridging lenders and their valuers assess a wide range of non-standard types, including:
- PRC (Precast Reinforced Concrete) homes - Airey, Cornish, Reema, Wimpey No-Fines, and similar post-war systems
- BISF and Trusteel steel-framed homes - common in post-war housing programmes
- Timber frame properties - particularly mid-twentieth century panel systems; modern timber frame is generally well accepted
- Large panel system (LPS) buildings - typically council-built blocks from the 1960s and 1970s
- In-situ concrete construction - poured rather than precast concrete structures
- Non-traditional cladding systems - including properties with unresolved cladding concerns
- Mundic properties - found in Cornwall and Devon, using mine waste in concrete
- Thatched roof properties and other non-standard roofing
Importantly, non-standard construction does not mean structurally unsound. Many of these properties remain entirely habitable and have long life expectancies. However, mainstream lenders decline them because their smaller buyer pool and specialist valuation requirements fall outside standard underwriting criteria. This is precisely where bridging finance for non-standard construction provides the solution - lenders assess deals on current value and exit strategy rather than construction type alone.
Why Mainstream Lenders Decline Non-Standard Properties
Understanding why mortgage lenders decline non-standard construction helps explain why bridging finance for non-standard construction represents such a valuable alternative. Mainstream lenders have three primary concerns. First, insurability some construction types require specialist insurance not all providers offer, creating uncertainty about the lender's security in a default scenario. Second, buyer pool properties that a significant proportion of buyers cannot mortgage have smaller effective markets, reducing the lender's ability to recover funds through sale if required. Third, valuation confidence valuers sometimes apply conservative assessments to non-standard properties where comparable evidence is limited.
Bridging lenders, by contrast, assess non-standard construction bridging loans case by case on their individual merits. As a result, they regularly fund properties that mortgage lenders decline, provided a realistic valuation is achievable and the exit strategy is credible. Furthermore, confirmation that the property holds buildings insurance even a basic insurer's confirmation of availability removes one of the key concerns lenders raise during underwriting.
LTV and Rates for Non-Standard Construction Bridging
Bridging finance for non-standard construction typically carries lower maximum LTV than equivalent standard construction lending, reflecting the additional risk factors involved. Rates also sit slightly higher to compensate for the specialist nature of the transaction. In 2026, the market generally prices as follows:
- Timber frame (modern, post-1970, brick outer skin): up to 70-75% LTV, rates from 0.65%/month
- Steel frame (BISF, structurally sound with survey): up to 65-70% LTV, rates from 0.75%/month
- PRC (repaired and certified, e.g. PRC Homes Ltd scheme): up to 65-70% LTV, rates from 0.75%/month
- PRC (unrepaired): up to 55-60% LTV, rates from 0.90%/month
- Mundic (Class A1/A2): up to 60–65% LTV depending on classification
- Thatched and other specialist types: 55-65% LTV assessed individually
Consequently, borrowers should model their deals conservatively on LTV, particularly for the higher-risk construction categories. Providing additional security, a second property, for example can increase available LTV on the non-standard asset. For an overview of how LTV impacts your eligibility more broadly, our bridging loan eligibility UK guide provides a comprehensive breakdown.
The Lifecycle: Acquire, Remediate, Refinance
Bridging finance for non-standard construction works most effectively as part of a structured lifecycle: acquire the property using the bridge, complete any necessary remediation or certification work during the bridge term, then refinance to a standard mortgage once the property meets conventional lending criteria. This approach converts an unmortgageable asset into a mainstream one and in doing so, often generates significant equity uplift.
For PRC properties, this typically involves completing an approved PRC repair scheme under the PRC Homes Ltd certification programme, after which a wider range of mortgage lenders will consider the property. For steel frame homes, a RICS Level 3 structural survey demonstrating sound frame condition is usually the key requirement for subsequent refinance. The RICS Red Book standards govern the valuation methodology that all lender-appointed surveyors must follow understanding what these surveys look for helps you present the property in the strongest possible light for both the bridge and subsequent refinance.
Non-Standard Construction at Auction
The auction market regularly produces non-standard construction properties, often at prices reflecting their financing challenges rather than their actual value. Investors with access to bridging finance for non-standard construction can bid confidently where mortgage-dependent buyers cannot and frequently acquire at prices that create strong equity even after accounting for remediation costs and bridge interest.
However, the 28-day auction completion deadline requires pre-arranged finance. A Decision in Principle from a lender confirming appetite for the specific construction type, before auction day, is essential. Without this, winning a non-standard construction lot at auction creates significant risk that finance will not be available within the required timeline. Working with a specialist broker who knows which lenders accept specific non-standard construction types removes this uncertainty entirely. Our guide on non-regulated bridging finance explains the broader eligibility criteria that apply to investment property bridging across all property types.
Conclusion
Bridging finance for non-standard construction opens doors to investment stock that many buyers cannot access through conventional mortgage finance. By understanding which construction types attract which LTV and rate parameters, structuring a credible remediation and refinance exit strategy, and working with a specialist broker who knows lender appetite for specific construction categories, investors transform the non-standard construction market from a problem into a genuine competitive advantage.
🎯 Key Takeaways
- Non-standard construction includes PRC, BISF steel frame, timber frame, LPS blocks, in-situ concrete, and mundic properties
- Bridging lenders assess each case on its merits, construction type alone does not determine eligibility
- LTV ranges from 55% (unrepaired PRC) to 75% (modern timber frame) confirm insurer availability early
- The acquire-remediate-refinance lifecycle converts unmortgageable assets into mainstream ones
- PRC properties need approved repair scheme certification; steel frame homes need RICS Level 3 structural survey
- Auction lots in non-standard construction offer strong value but always arrange a DIP before bidding
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