Commercial Mortgages Birmingham
Up to 75% LTV · EBITDA-driven

Owner-Occupier Commercial Mortgages Birmingham

Long-term debt funding the purchase of the property your business trades from. Up to 75% loan-to-value. EBITDA cover at 1.3 to 1.5x. Interest rates 6.0 to 7.5% pa for strong covenants. 5 to 25 year repayment terms. Active across dental, accountancy, light industrial, professional services and pharmacy in Birmingham and the West Midlands.

LTV

Up to 75%

Rate

From 6.0% pa

Term

5 to 25 years

Facility

£150K to £5M

What is an owner-occupier mortgage and how does it differ from investment?

An owner-occupier commercial mortgage is long-term secured debt funding the purchase of the property your business trades from, your dental practice freehold in the Edgbaston Medical Quarter, your accountancy office on Colmore Row, your engineering workshop in Tyseley, your trade-counter unit in Aston or Witton. The lender takes a first charge over the building; you fund a deposit (typically 25 to 30%); the facility is amortised over 15 to 25 years on monthly capital-and-interest repayments. Most owner-occupier deals are taken out by a limited company trading entity with a personal guarantee from the directors, though sole traders, partnerships and LLPs are equally accommodated.

The lending test is fundamentally different from an investment mortgage. Where investment lenders test rent against interest cost (ICR), owner-occupier lenders test EBITDA cover: trading profit (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) measured against the mortgage payment, with a typical comfort threshold of 1.3 to 1.5x. Two years of clean filed accounts is the standard minimum, though specialist desks flex this for established sectors (dental, GP, pharmacy) on 12 to 18 months trading.

It is also different from a residential mortgage, and that distinction matters legally. Owner-occupier commercial lending falls largely outside FCA-regulated mortgage rules, because the borrower is a business buying business premises (not an individual buying a home). The exception: where a sole trader uses the property partly as a residence, the deal can fall into FCA-regulated territory; we flag that at outset. For limited-company borrowers buying B-class commercial stock, the deal is unregulated commercial lending.

In Birmingham the typical owner-occupier facility size is £150K to £3M, with the bulk of volume in the £500K to £1.5M bracket. LTVs of 70 to 75% are routine for established businesses. Interest rates currently 6.0 to 7.5% pa for strong covenants, stretching to 9.0% on tighter cases. Term length is the most useful affordability lever, extending repayment from 15 to 20 years often clears the EBITDA test where rate alone will not. Stamp duty (SDLT) on commercial purchase applies up to 5% on the slice above £250,000; we factor it into the deposit-and-fees model before submission.

Lender appetite and rates for owner-occupier deals in the West Midlands

1. Initial appraisal

Send the property details, last two years of accounts and current management figures. We assess affordability, sector appetite, likely loan-to-value and which lender desks will engage.

2. Indicative terms in 48 hours

Three to five lender quotes, interest rate, LTV, term, fees, conditions. You pick the preferred route before any valuation cost lands.

3. Application packaging

Full credit pack: filed accounts, business plan, property details, deposit proof, professional team. A clean pack speeds credit committee approval.

4. RICS Red Book valuation

Critical-path item, typically 2 to 3 weeks. The lender instructs from a panel; valuation comments on bricks-and-mortar value and any specialist sector overlay.

5. Credit approval

Most well-presented owner-occupier cases approve within 1 to 2 weeks of valuation. Clean covenant, clean property, clean numbers, minimum friction.

6. Legal completion and SDLT

Standard freehold conveyancing plus debenture and personal guarantee. Stamp duty land tax payable by the buyer at completion. 3 to 4 weeks typical.

Sectors where Birmingham owner-occupier lending is deepest

  • Dental practice principals buying their freehold (Edgbaston Medical Quarter and the Mere Green / Sutton Coldfield suburban cluster)
  • Accountancy, legal, financial services and consultancy firms buying their Colmore Row, Brindleyplace or Edgbaston office
  • Light industrial, engineering and trade-counter businesses (Tyseley, Aston, Witton, Birmingham Business Park)
  • Pharmacy operators acquiring trading premises across the B-postcode high streets
  • Independent retailers buying their high-street unit (Harborne, Moseley, Kings Heath, Stirchley)
  • Health and wellness operators (clinics, physio, opticians, vets) acquiring premises
  • Professional services partnerships transitioning from leasehold to freehold ahead of a partner buy-out

Why Birmingham has unusually deep owner-occupier capacity

Eight challenger banks compete on this exact product into the West Midlands. Allica Bank (national, strong Midlands SME book), Shawbrook, Hampshire Trust Bank, Cambridge & Counties, Aldermore, YBS Commercial, Cynergy Bank and OakNorth all run active programmes. NatWest, Lloyds commercial banking, Barclays and Santander all run West Midlands corporate desks and compete on the larger end. Sector clusters worth noting: dental in the Edgbaston Medical Quarter and the Mere Green / Sutton Coldfield suburban cluster, light industrial in Tyseley and Aston / Witton, professional services across Colmore Business District, and SME freeholds across Harborne, Moseley and Kings Heath. Refinancing volume is particularly strong on assets bought 2019 to 2021 where current valuations support a meaningfully better LTV than the original draw. See also our West Midlands commercial mortgage broker hub.

Owner-Occupier Commercial Mortgage FAQs

Typically up to 75% loan-to-value, capped by the EBITDA cover test (1.3 to 1.5x). For a £1M property at 75% LTV that is a £750K facility; you need EBITDA covering the mortgage repayment by ~1.4x. Use our commercial mortgage calculator to model scenarios across rate and term.
Typically 25 to 30%, normally funded from accumulated retained profit inside the limited company or from a director loan. Some specialist desks consider 80% LTV (20% deposit) for very strong covenants in defensive sectors (dental, GP, pharmacy), but the interest rate steps up to compensate.
Two years of clean filed accounts is the comfortable minimum. 12 to 18 months works in established sectors (dental, GP, pharmacy, regulated professions) where the qualification itself underwrites the cashflow. Pre-trade or first-year buys are harder, usually need a higher deposit and a stronger personal guarantee.
No. Owner-occupier commercial mortgages are unregulated and fall outside the Financial Conduct Authority's regulated mortgage perimeter, a limited company buying B-class commercial premises is an unregulated commercial loan, not a residential mortgage. We do not hold FCA authorisation because the products we arrange are unregulated. The exception: where a sole trader will personally occupy part of the premises as a residence, the deal can fall into the regulated perimeter, in that case we refer to a regulated firm.
Stamp duty land tax (SDLT) on commercial property purchase runs at 0% on the slice up to £150K, 2% from £150K to £250K, and 5% above £250K. On a £1M business premises the SDLT bill is around £39,500. We factor it into your deposit-and-fees model so there are no surprises at completion.
Up to 25 years. Most owner-occupier deals run on 15 to 20 year repayment schedules. Longer terms ease monthly affordability but increase total interest paid; we model both before recommending. Interest-only is occasionally available on the early years of larger structured deals; standard product is full capital-and-interest amortisation.

Exploring Owner-Occupier Commercial Mortgage for your Birmingham scheme?

Free-of-charge scheme assessment. Indicative terms within 48 hours.