Property type: MOT & Automotive
Automotive Property Bridging Loans Plymouth
We arrange bridging finance against MOT and automotive property across Plymouth and the wider Devon automotive market. Loan sizes run £200,000 to £5 million, terms 6 to 18 months, completions in 10 to 21 days. Automotive bridging is specialist underwriting; pricing sits 0.9 to 1.4% per month depending on operator covenant, trading evidence and the credibility of the exit.
- Decisions in hours
- Completion in days
- £100k to £25m
- Devon specialists
Plymouth · Devon
Bridge to your next move.
The asset class
What mot & automotive property looks like in Devon.
MOT and automotive property covers MOT testing stations, independent garages and workshops, franchised car dealerships with showroom and forecourt, bodyshop and paint facilities, tyre-and-exhaust centres, and specialist automotive trade-counter and parts distribution. Each sub-segment carries its own valuation methodology. Independent garages and MOT stations trade on workshop bays, MOT licence class and customer-base evidence. Dealerships trade on showroom configuration, brand-franchise terms and forecourt size. Bodyshops trade on spray-booth capacity and insurer-approved status. Specialist trading-asset underwriting drives the case.
Use cases
Bridging use cases for mot & automotive assets.
Automotive bridging cases in this market cluster around four patterns. The first is purchase of an MOT station or garage from a retiring proprietor, where the bridge funds the purchase pending refinance to term commercial debt or asset-finance restructure. The second is purchase of dealership premises where a franchise change or a sale-and-leaseback is in train, with the bridge funding the property purchase separately from the trading business. The third is change-of-use plays where a tired automotive site in a residential area is bought, the use-class is changed, and the site is redeveloped for residential or small mixed-use. The fourth is capital-raise against an unencumbered automotive freehold held by a long-term operator, often to fund the next site or to release working capital. Lenders care about the trading evidence, the operator's covenant and the realism of the exit at stabilised operation.
Plymouth context
Automotive Trade Across Estover, Plympton and the A38 Corridor
Plymouth automotive trade clusters along the main arterial roads and on the eastern industrial fringe. The Estover Industrial Estate carries a dense run of MOT testing stations, independent garages, bodyshops and tyre-and-exhaust centres serving the wider Plymouth catchment, with several specialist commercial-vehicle workshops on the same estate handling fleet and HGV servicing. Plympton on the eastern side of the city carries a parallel cluster of MOT bays, independent garages and franchised dealership stock along the Ridgeway and the A38 service-road frontage, serving the suburban catchment and the broader east-Plymouth residential belt at Plymstock and Saltram. Larger franchised dealerships sit on the main routes along the A386 toward Tavistock and along the A38 toward Saltash and Exeter, where larger plots accommodate the forecourt-and-showroom configurations the modern franchise contracts require. The naval-base vehicle servicing requirement at HMNB Devonport, the ferry-port HGV trade running through Millbay, and the Royal Mail and parcel-distribution operations all support a specialist commercial-vehicle servicing market that runs separately from the consumer-car trade. Across Devon, the picture is consistent. Exeter and Newton Abbot carry larger franchised dealership stock; the rural and market-town garages in Tavistock, Okehampton, Totnes and the South Hams trade on local catchment and a steady MOT-and-service base. Lenders read the location and the trading evidence together; an MOT station on a busy arterial road reads very differently from one on a quiet side street.
Valuation and lenders
Valuation and lender considerations.
Automotive valuations come back on a trading-business basis for going-concern operators, on a vacant-possession basis where the property is being marketed without the trade, and on an alternative-use basis where redevelopment is the play. Lenders lend on the lower of the relevant figures with a haircut for specialist single-use risk. LTV caps sit at 55 to 65% on trading automotive with strong evidence, 50 to 60% on vacant stock, and 60 to 65% on as-is value where the case is a clear redevelopment play. Octane Capital and Hope Capital both take automotive on bridging, with Shawbrook, OakNorth and Cambridge & Counties stronger on the larger franchised-dealership cases. Environmental ground-condition reports are commonly required given historical-use risk.
What we arrange
What we typically arrange.
A typical Plymouth automotive bridge sits at £350,000 to £1.5 million, 55 to 65% LTV, 9 to 15 months term, 0.9 to 1.3% per month, arrangement fee 1.5 to 2%. Redevelopment cases include a monitored works tranche and often run longer to allow for planning resolution. Exit is typically refinance to term commercial debt, sale to an operator, or sale of redeveloped residential units on a change-of-use exit. Environmental reports add 2 to 4 weeks to completion timelines on most cases.
FAQs
MOT & Automotive bridging questions
Can we bridge an MOT station purchase from a retiring proprietor?
+
Yes. MOT-station purchases from retiring proprietors are a regular part of the automotive book. Lenders need trading accounts, MOT-licence class confirmation, equipment schedules and a clear operator-succession plan. LTV typically caps at 60 to 65% on the lower of trading-business value and vacant-possession value. The exit is usually refinance to term commercial debt at 12 to 18 months once the new operator has rebased trading evidence under their own name.
How do lenders treat environmental contamination on automotive sites?
+
An environmental ground-condition report is required on almost every automotive case given the historical-use risk from fuel storage, oils and solvents. Lenders price for any identified contamination and the remediation cost. Where the site is clean or where contamination is well-contained and the remediation cost is quantified, the case progresses normally. Where contamination is material, the LTV caps drop and the rate moves up. We work with environmental consultants familiar with the site-screening process before going to lender.
What does a change-of-use redevelopment look like for an automotive site?
+
The buyer acquires a tired automotive site in a residential or mixed-use location, secures planning consent for redevelopment to residential or small mixed-use, and the bridge funds purchase plus the demolition and early works. Remediation of any contamination forms part of the works programme. The exit is typically refinance to development finance for the build phase, or sale of the site with planning to a residential developer. Total term 12 to 24 months is typical depending on the planning and remediation timeline.
Tell us about the deal
Indicative terms within 24 hours.
A short triage call, then a sized indicative offer against a named lender for your mot & automotive property in Plymouth or across Devon.
Regulated bridging on owner-occupied residential property falls under FCA regulation. Unregulated bridging on commercial and investment property does not. We are not directly regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, and we introduce regulated cases to authorised partners who carry out the regulated activity.
Next step
Talk to a Plymouth mot & automotive bridging specialist.
We arrange short-term finance on mot & automotive property across Plymouth, the City of Portsmouth unitary authority and the wider Devon market. Indicative terms in 24 hours.