Semi-commercial property does not sit neatly in residential or commercial lending. It occupies a middle ground that often leaves investors stuck between high-street banks that do not understand the risk and commercial lenders that overcomplicate the process.
If you have tried to finance a shop with a flat above or a professional office with living quarters, you have likely realised that the one-size-fits-all approach of residential broking does not apply here.
We see semi-commercial finance as a strategic tool. It requires a structured approach to funding that accounts for the complexity of the asset while protecting your long-term wealth.
What is semi-commercial and mixed-use property?
A semi-commercial property (often called mixed-use) is a single legal entity that contains both residential and business elements. While many investors start with a simple buy-to-let, moving into mixed-use is often the first step toward serious commercial investment.
Typical examples:
· Retail with residential: ground-floor shop, takeaway or salon with one or more self-contained flats above.
· Professional services: townhouse with a dental surgery, law firm or accountancy office on the ground floor and living quarters on the upper floors.
· Licensed premises: pubs or B&Bs that include significant private owner or staff accommodation.
· Light industrial: small workshops, studios or maker spaces with attached residential.
Why lenders treat it differently
Lenders view these properties through a dual lens. They see the stability of residential rent combined with the higher yield, but also higher risk, of a commercial tenant. Because the value of the building is often tied to the strength of the business lease, a standard buy-to-let mortgage will not work. A pure commercial mortgage might be unnecessarily expensive. Specialist mixed-use finance is designed to balance these two worlds.
How lenders assess semi-commercial deals
LTV differences
In residential, 75% to 80% LTV is standard. In semi-commercial UK applications, LTVs usually hover between 60% and 75%. The specific percentage often depends on the split. If the residential element makes up 60% of the property value, you will likely access better terms than if the commercial unit represents the bulk of the asset.
Stress testing and serviceability
Lenders look at global rental income but do not treat all rent equally. Residential rent is usually assessed similarly to a buy-to-let with an interest cover ratio around 125% to 145%. Commercial rent is weighted by lease length: if the commercial tenant is on a short-term licence rather than a formal full-repairing-and-insuring lease, the lender may haircut that income or ignore it entirely.
Limited company considerations
Many clients choose to hold semi-commercial assets within a limited company structure. This is often more tax-efficient for higher-rate taxpayers as it allows for better interest relief. Most specialist lenders are perfectly comfortable with this, provided the company is set up correctly with the right SIC codes.
Personal guarantees
Unless you are a large corporate entity, expect to provide a personal guarantee. Even where the mortgage is in a limited company name, the lender wants to know the directors are personally committed to the debt.
Common reasons semi-commercial finance is declined
Rental stress shortfall: if the commercial unit is vacant or rent is significantly above market rate, the lender's stress test will fail.
Commercial element too dominant: some lenders have a percentage split rule. If the commercial part exceeds 50% of total floor area or value, they may classify it as a pure commercial deal, with higher rates and lower LTVs.
Experience gaps: if this is your first mixed-use property and you have no commercial landlording background, some high-street commercial arms will say no.
Valuation and title complexity: if residential flats are on separate long leases but the ground floor is not, or there are restrictive covenants on commercial use, traditional lenders may step back. We know which lenders are comfortable with split titles.
Refinance vs purchase strategy
When refinance works: refinancing a semi-commercial property is often about pulling capital out to build your portfolio elsewhere. If a commercial tenant has just signed a new 10-year lease, the investment value of the building has likely increased even if the bricks and mortar have not changed. That is the moment to refinance and secure a lower rate.
Exit thinking: we often see investors take a high-rate bridge to buy a shop-and-flat at auction with a plan to renovate and move to a long-term mortgage. If you have not checked that you meet the exit criteria for a term lender before you buy, you can end up stuck on expensive bridge rates. Always look at the end game before securing initial funding.
Risks investors often overlook
Void risk on the commercial unit: a residential flat in a good area rarely stays empty for long. A commercial unit can sit vacant for months if the local economy shifts. Make sure you have liquidity to cover the full mortgage payment if the shop downstairs goes bust.
Tenant covenant strength: a local independent florist is a different risk profile to a national coffee chain. Lenders prefer blue-chip tenants and often offer better rates if the tenant has a strong financial history.
Lease length impact: as a commercial lease nears its end, property value can drop significantly. With only two years left on a commercial lease, refinancing can be very difficult until a new lease is signed.
Frequently asked questions
What deposit is needed for a semi-commercial mortgage?
Generally a 25% to 30% deposit. While some niche lenders may consider 20% in exceptional cases where the residential element is strong, 75% LTV is the typical ceiling for most mixed-use finance.
Can I get a semi-commercial mortgage in a limited company?
Yes. Most of the specialist market is geared toward limited company SPV structures. It is often the preferred route for professional landlords.
Are rates higher than buy-to-let?
Usually yes. Mixed-use property is seen as higher risk and requires more manual underwriting than a standard house, so interest rates and arrangement fees are higher than a traditional residential buy-to-let.
Can I convert semi-commercial to residential?
Yes, this is a popular strategy. If you intend to convert the property you may need a development or bridging loan initially, as a standard semi-commercial mortgage is based on current use, not future potential.
Can I refinance after renovation?
Yes. Once renovation is complete and a new tenant is in place, we can help you refinance based on the post-works value, which often allows you to recoup your initial capital.
Last updated: 10 May 2026