Why Banks Do Not Fund Land
The Liquidity Problem
Land without planning permission is an illiquid asset. In a forced sale, the pool of buyers is small and the achievable price is unpredictable. Consequently, mainstream lenders decline land as security because their standard credit models cannot reliably value it or sell it quickly if required. Furthermore, land generates no rental income to service debt whilst the planning process runs. This combination of illiquidity, unpredictable value, and zero income makes land fundamentally unsuitable for mainstream mortgage products.
Specialist bridging lenders, by contrast, have built their underwriting around exactly this type of asset. They assess land value based on planning status, location, and comparable transactions rather than standardised income metrics. As a result, they can move quickly where mainstream lenders cannot. A bridging loan for land therefore represents not just a product. It represents access to an entire category of opportunity that most buyers without specialist finance simply cannot reach.
Where Land Opportunity Meets Urgency
Land frequently trades through auction, particularly agricultural land, development sites, and garden plots. The 28-day auction completion deadline makes a bridging loan for land the only viable funding route in these situations. In addition, off-market land transactions regularly require swift action to prevent competing buyers. A Decision in Principle obtained before entering negotiations confirms your borrowing capacity and signals credibility to vendors. Always check HM Land Registry before any land purchase to verify title, boundaries, rights of way, and any existing charges against the site.
How a Bridging Loan for Land Solves This
Speed That Mainstream Lenders Cannot Match
A bridging loan for land advances funds against the current value of the site. It completes within 7 to 14 days for most straightforward cases. Interest rolls up during the holding period, preserving your cash flow for planning consultants, architects, and application fees. Furthermore, the bridge term typically runs for 12 to 18 months. This provides sufficient time to pursue planning and execute your exit whether that is a sale or a refinance to development finance.
Why BLB's 200+ Lender Panel Matters for Land
Land lending is one of the most specialist categories in the bridging market. Not all bridging lenders accept land as security. Of those that do, appetite varies considerably by planning status, location, land type, and exit strategy. Consequently, a whole-of-market broker with direct lender relationships consistently identifies the right lender for your specific site not simply the most accessible one. In addition, our direct access to over 200 specialist lenders unlocks terms that direct applicants typically cannot achieve.
Can You Get a Bridging Loan for Land Without Planning Permission?
Yes and It Is More Common Than You Might Think
Many borrowers assume that land without planning permission is unfundable. In practice, specialist bridging lenders regularly advance against sites at every stage of the planning spectrum from agricultural land with no prospect of consent through to sites with resolution to grant permission pending formal approval. The key variable is not whether you have planning. It is whether the current value of the site supports the loan and whether your exit strategy is credible for both planning outcomes.
Furthermore, some of the strongest planning gain opportunities involve acquiring land before consent is granted precisely because the price reflects the risk. A bridging loan for land without planning permission holds the site while you pursue consent, with the exit either being sale at the consented value or refinance to development finance once permission is secured. For more detail on this specific strategy, our bridging loan for planning permission guide covers the full process.
Rates and LTV by Planning Status
How Planning Status Drives Your Rate
Planning status is the single biggest driver of rates and LTV on a bridging loan for land. With the Bank of England base rate at 3.75%, the market in 2026 prices land bridging as follows:
- Residential land with full planning permission: 0.91% to 1.2% per month, up to 70% LTV
- Residential with outline planning: 0.99% to 1.2% per month, up to 65% LTV
- Allocated land (in local plan, no permission): 1.1% to 1.4% per month, up to 60% LTV
- Residential land with no planning: 1.1% to 1.5% per month, up to 55% to 60% LTV
- Agricultural land: 1.1% to 1.65% per month, up to 55% LTV
- Greenbelt or strategic land: 1.25% to 1.65% per month, up to 50% LTV
- Commercial or mixed-use land: 0.95% to 1.45% per month, up to 65% LTV
For a full breakdown of how land rates compare to other bridging products, see our bridging loan rates UK guide.
What Lenders Need to See
Lenders assessing a bridging loan for land focus on four areas. First, the current value of the site confirmed by a specialist RICS land valuation. Second, the planning position precisely what exists, what is in progress, and what is achievable given current local policy. The National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) sets the national policy context that local authorities apply. Third, a credible exit strategy evidenced for both planning success and planning failure. Fourth, comparable land transactions supporting the valuation and asking price.
In addition, providing additional security alongside the land such as a residential property can increase the available LTV across all planning categories. Your broker should model this alongside the standard land-only LTV to assess whether cross-charging improves your deal materially. For a full overview of how LTV works across different scenarios, our bridging loan eligibility UK guide covers the key criteria.
Exit Strategies for Land Bridging Loans
Sale at Post-Planning Value
The most common exit for a bridging loan for land is sale of the consented site to a developer or house builder at the higher post-planning value. This is the planning gain strategy acquire before consent, add planning value during the bridge term, and exit at a higher price. Consequently, the bridge term typically runs for 12 to 18 months. This provides sufficient time for the planning application, decision, and marketing of the consented site. Our dedicated bridging loan for planning permission guide covers this strategy in depth.
Refinance to Development Finance
Alternatively, developers who intend to build out the scheme use the land bridge to acquire the site and then refinance to development finance once planning is granted. Development finance lenders typically require planning permission before advancing funds. As a result, the land bridge holds the site during the planning process. The exit onto development finance then provides the certainty needed to plan the construction programme. This sequenced approach is one of the most common structures for residential development projects in the UK.
Example Land Acquisition Scenario
The opportunity: A developer identifies a 0.4-acre garden plot at auction. Guide price: £95,000. The plot has no planning permission but sits within a residential area where comparable consented plots have recently sold for £220,000 to £250,000.
The problem: The auction requires completion within 28 days. No mainstream lender will fund the site. The developer needs to move quickly before a competing bidder secures a DIP.
The solution: BLB arranges a bridging loan for land at 1.25% per month against the current site value of £95,000 at 60% LTV, a facility of £57,000. The developer funds the remainder from reserves. Completion takes 11 days. The developer then appoints a planning consultant and submits a residential development application during the bridge term.
The exit: Planning permission is granted for 3 residential units. The consented site sells to a local house builder for £235,000. The bridge redeems in full, generating a profit of approximately £110,000 before planning and professional costs.
Conclusion
Move Fast on Land. Plan the Exit First.
A bridging loan for land gives developers and investors the speed to acquire sites that slower-moving competitors simply cannot reach. By understanding how planning status affects your rates and LTV, presenting a credible exit strategy for both planning success and failure, and working with a specialist broker who knows the land lending market, you access one of the most underserved categories of property opportunity in the UK. Furthermore, discussing your requirements before finding a specific site gives you a clear borrowing framework and the confidence to act decisively when the right opportunity appears.
🎯 Key Takeaways
- Banks do not fund land — specialist bridging lenders assess planning status, location and exit strategy instead
- Rates range from 0.91%/month (full planning, low LTV) to 1.65%/month (greenbelt, no planning)
- Planning status is the single biggest driver of both rate and maximum LTV
- The two main exits are sale at post-planning value and refinance to development finance
- Your exit strategy must work for both outcomes — planning granted and planning refused
- BLB completes land bridges in 7 to 14 days across 200+ specialist lenders
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