Warwickshire

Development Exit Finance in Rugby

Development exit bridging, sales-period finance, equity release and refinance for completed and part-finished schemes in Rugby. Finance against the scheme and its gross development value, not a regulated home loan.

Matt Lenzie
Written and reviewed by Matt Lenzie Founder & Principal Broker · 25 years arranging development finance · Reviewed June 2026
£285,000
Median sale price (HM Land Registry)
1,314
Transactions, last 12 months
Steady
Exit liquidity
£62.8bn
UK investment volume (CBRE)

If you have a scheme reaching practical completion in Rugby and the development loan is maturing before the units have sold, development exit finance bridges that gap. We arrange it across Rugby and the wider Warwickshire market, sizing the facility on gross development value, the sales evidence and the redemption date on the existing loan, then placing it with the lender most likely to fund the run to a sold or refinanced position.

A Rugby development exit is underwritten on gross development value, the credibility of the sales plan and the strength of the exit beneath the bridge. We size the facility on loan to gross development value, the sales-period runway and the redemption that clears it, whether that exit is unit sales, a development exit refinance or a sale of the block. The local resale market sets the pace: Rugby recorded around 1,314 property transactions over the last twelve months at a median of £285,000 (HM Land Registry), a steady market that a lender reads as the speed a finished scheme will sell.

How we fund a Rugby scheme from completion to sold

We arrange the full range of development exit structures for Rugby developers and investors. A development exit bridge repays the development loan at practical completion, lowering the cost of carry and buying time to sell. Sales-period finance funds the marketing run so units are not discounted to hit a redemption date. A part-complete exit steps in before practical completion where the original facility has run out of term or headroom. An unsold-units facility bridges the tail of a scheme once most units have sold. An equity-release exit pulls surplus value out of a finished scheme to fund the deposit or land on the next site. A refinance moves retained units onto term or buy-to-let debt. We place each case with the lenders that fund finished and part-finished schemes across Warwickshire.

The schemes we exit in Rugby

A development exit turns on how the finished scheme sells or stabilises, and that looks different for every property type. We arrange the exit on all of them in Rugby and across Warwickshire: completed apartment schemes selling unit by unit, build-to-rent blocks leasing up to a stabilised investment refinance, purpose-built student accommodation turning on the academic-year lettings cycle, HMO and co-living schemes letting room by room, mixed-use schemes balancing the differing timelines of their residential and commercial parts, and office-to-residential and permitted-development conversions where warranties and building control sign-off drive the exit. An apartment scheme is read on sales rate and price. A build-to-rent block is read on lease-up and the investment yield. A conversion is read on warranties and unit titles. Knowing which lender funds which exit here, and at what leverage, is the work we do before a case reaches a credit committee.

What lenders test on a Rugby development exit

A development exit lender underwrites three things: gross development value against the day-one value, the credibility of the sales plan that clears the scheme, and the exit that repays the loan. We frame the loan to gross development value, the sales-period runway and the interest cover across it, and the refinance or sale beneath the bridge. The wider UK investment market gives the exit context: around £62.8bn of commercial property changed hands (CBRE, 2025), a measure of the liquidity a sale or refinance depends on.

Before you commit to a development exit on a Rugby scheme, the checks that matter are the realism of the sales rate, the headroom to cover interest until the units clear, the gross development value against the day-one value, the strength of the exit (unit sales, a term lender's appetite to refinance, or a buyer for the block), and the time the bridge gives you before its own redemption. We pressure-test these as part of arranging the finance, because the same things a developer should weigh are the things a lender underwrites.

What the Rugby and West Midlands market means for the exit

Rugby is a steady market for an exit: around 1,314 transactions over the last twelve months at a median of £285,000 (HM Land Registry), concentrated across the CV22, CV21, CV23 postcode areas. Birmingham and Coventry form the largest regional office market, with HS2-driven regeneration and strong build-to-rent and logistics pipelines. A high-growth market where regeneration is reshaping the city core. Short-term and bridging lending is a deep market nationally, with around £13.7bn of gross lending (BDLA, Q3 2025), so a well-structured Rugby development exit has a competitive field of lenders behind it. We read this local evidence alongside the scheme's own gross development value and sales plan when we size and place a Rugby facility.

  • Birmingham anchors the largest regional office market
  • HS2 and city-centre regeneration
  • Strong logistics and BTR delivery

The local market in Rugby and your exit

Local sold-price data is the evidence a development exit lender reads when it sizes the sales runway, because a development exit is repaid by unit sales or a refinance into the local market. Rugby recorded around 1,314 sales over the past year at a median of £285,000, which makes the local market steady for an exit.

Values and liquidity set the take-out. A deeper, more liquid market gives a buyer or a refinancing lender more confidence, which in turn supports leverage on the development exit facility while the remaining units sell.

Sold price by property type (Rugby)

Detached£426,500
Semi-detached£280,000
Terraced£216,000
Flat / apartment£132,000

Source: HM Land Registry price-paid data, last 12 months. Local market context for exit and valuation, not an asset-specific valuation.

Recent price trend

QuarterMedianSales
2024-Q2£300k587
2024-Q3£287k554
2024-Q4£285k658
2025-Q1£310k655
2025-Q2£309k426
2025-Q3£275k454
2025-Q4£283k369
2026-Q1£268k219
FAQ

Development exit finance in Rugby: common questions

What is development exit finance and when would a Rugby scheme need it?

Development exit finance is short-dated bridging that repays a developer's development facility at or near practical completion and funds the period until the scheme sells or refinances. A Rugby scheme needs it when the build is finished, or nearly finished, but the units have not yet sold and the development loan is maturing. The bridge replaces the development debt, usually at a lower cost because the build risk is gone, and buys time to sell at full value rather than at a discount forced by a deadline.

How much can I borrow on a development exit in Rugby?

Development exit facilities are usually sized on loan to gross development value, commonly up to around 70 to 75 percent depending on the scheme, the sales evidence and the exit. Leverage reflects how close the scheme is to a sold position and how strong the refinance or sale beneath it is. We hold more than one hundred lender relationships and shortlist the desks most likely to back a Rugby case. Figures are indicative and not an offer of finance.

What is the difference between development finance and development exit finance in Rugby?

Development finance funds the build itself and is priced for construction risk. Development exit finance replaces it once the scheme reaches practical completion, when that build risk is gone, so it is usually cheaper and gives the developer a clean sales period. Many Rugby schemes move straight from a development loan onto a development exit bridge at completion to cut the carry and avoid a forced sale.

Which lenders provide development exit and bridging finance in Rugby?

We arrange across challenger banks, specialist bridging lenders and debt funds that fund finished and part-finished schemes. The right lender for a Rugby scheme depends on the property type, how far sales have progressed, the leverage you need and the exit. We match the case to the desks that actively fund development exits across Warwickshire, rather than steering every deal to one name.

Can I release equity from a completed Rugby scheme?

Yes. A cash-out development exit repays the development lender and releases surplus equity in the finished scheme, sized on gross development value, so you can fund the deposit or land on the next site while the current units sell. We structure the release against the value and the sales plan, and set the redemption so the bridge clears as units sell or the scheme refinances on a Rugby case.

What is the property market like in Rugby for an exit?

Rugby recorded around 1,314 property transactions over the last twelve months at a median of £285,000 (HM Land Registry), a steady market with values typically in the value band. Liquidity matters because a development exit is repaid by unit sales or a refinance, and a deeper local market gives a lender more confidence in the sales runway. We read this evidence when we size and place a Rugby facility.

Do you only arrange finance in Rugby?

No. We arrange development exit, bridging and development finance across the whole of Warwickshire and the wider UK, with the same approach: read the gross development value and the exit, match the case to the lenders that fund the property type, and negotiate terms on the borrower's behalf.

Exiting a scheme in Rugby?

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