Guides

Development exit finance guides

Plain-English answers on repaying development finance at completion, sizing a bridge on gross development value, costs and rates, and exiting a finished scheme, from a specialist arranger.

Straight answers to the questions developers and investors ask before they exit a completed scheme. Written by Matt Lenzie, who has arranged more than £500 million of property and development finance over 25 years. This is finance to repay a development facility, fund the sales period and refinance a finished scheme as a business or investment, not a regulated home loan.

Definitions

What is development exit finance?

Development exit finance is the short-term bridge that repays a development loan once a scheme is built but not yet sold or refinanced. This guide defines it, shows when a scheme needs it, how it is sized on GDV, what it costs and how it is repaid.

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Definitions

Gross development value (GDV) explained

Gross development value is the headline number in every development appraisal, and the figure a development exit facility is sized against. This guide defines GDV, shows how it is calculated, and separates it from net development value and day-one value.

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Definitions

What is practical completion?

Practical completion is the moment a building is finished enough to hand over, and it is the event that lets a developer replace a maturing development loan. This guide defines practical completion, explains the certificate, sets out what changes at PC and shows what warranties and sign-offs a lender needs to fund an exit.

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Definitions

Loan to GDV explained for a development exit

Loan to GDV is the ratio that decides how much a finished scheme can borrow against what it will be worth once sold. This guide explains what it means, how it differs from loan to value and loan to cost, and the bands that apply on a development exit.

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Comparisons

Development exit finance vs development finance

Development finance funds the build and is priced for construction risk. Development exit finance replaces it at practical completion, once that risk has gone, to fund the sales period more cheaply. This guide draws the line between the two.

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Comparisons

Development exit finance vs a bridging loan

A development exit bridge and a generic bridging loan are both short-term debt secured by a first charge, but they are sized and structured very differently. This guide draws the line between development exit finance vs bridging, and shows where each one fits.

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Comparisons

Selling vs refinancing units at the end of a scheme

At practical completion you face one decision: sell the units to repay, or refinance the ones you keep onto term or buy-to-let debt. This guide sets out when each makes sense, and how a development exit bridge buys the time to choose.

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Process

How development exit finance works

Development exit finance is the short-term debt that replaces a development loan once a scheme reaches practical completion. This guide walks through the trigger, the repayment of the senior lender, GDV sizing, the interest options and how the loan is redeemed.

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Process

When to use development exit finance

Development exit finance has a few clear moments where it earns its place: a development loan running to maturity, a sales window that needs more room, or equity locked in a finished scheme. This guide sets out the scenarios and the timing.

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Process

Development exit finance criteria and eligibility

Lenders assess a development exit application against a clear checklist: how finished the scheme is, what it is worth, what has sold, and how the loan repays. This guide sets out the development exit finance criteria in the order a funder works through them.

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Process

How to finance a property development

Financing a property development means lining up the right debt for each stage, from buying the land through the build to selling or refinancing the finished scheme. This guide walks the full development finance lifecycle and shows where development exit finance sits at the end.

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Process

Refinancing a completed development

A completed scheme reaches a point where the development loan must be repaid, and the developer has to decide how to refinance it. This guide sets out the two routes off development finance: onto a development exit bridge to buy sales time, or straight onto term or buy-to-let debt where units are retained.

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Process

Finishing a stalled or part-complete development

When a development facility runs out of term or headroom before practical completion, the build can stall with the original lender's loan due and the units unsold. This guide explains the funding that takes over a part-built site, finishes it and carries it to a sale.

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Costs

How much does development exit finance cost?

The cost of a development exit facility has a handful of moving parts: the monthly interest rate, lender fees, the valuation, the legals, and the way interest is held back. This guide breaks each one down so you can see where the money goes, with all figures illustrative and not an offer of finance.

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Costs

Development exit finance rates explained

Development exit finance is priced lower than the development loan it replaces and higher than a long-term term loan, and the rate moves with leverage, GDV and the strength of the sales evidence. This guide explains how the rate is set and how to read an indicative quote.

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Lenders

Development finance lenders explained

The development finance lenders that fund a build are not always the right desks to carry a finished scheme through its sales period. This guide segments the lender market by type and shows how a whole-of-market arranger matches a completed development to the desk that fits it.

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Coming up to practical completion?

Send us the scheme and the gross development value and we will come back with a view on fundability and likely terms within one working day.