Semi-Commercial Mortgages in Bury
Mortgages and finance for shops with flats above, mixed-use blocks and other part-commercial, part-residential property in Bury.
If you are buying or refinancing a mixed-use property in Bury, the right loan is rarely the cheapest headline rate. It is the one whose lender understands how the residential element above a commercial unit affects value, income and risk. We arrange semi-commercial mortgages across Bury and the wider Greater Manchester market, from a single shop with a flat above to a parade of units with residential uppers.
We assess a Bury semi-commercial case on its combined commercial and residential fundamentals, with the local residential market as a gauge of the value and lettability of the living space. That market is steady, around 1,943 residential sales in the past year at a £230,000 median, which helps test the residential element of a shop with a flat above or a mixed-use block.
How we structure semi-commercial finance for Bury property
We arrange the full range of semi-commercial and mixed-use finance for Bury property. A semi-commercial mortgage funds the purchase or refinance of an investment or owner-occupied mixed-use asset, typically to 70 to 75 percent of value, priced from around 6.5 to 8.5 percent a year. Where the residential element is large, a mixed-use mortgage may be sized on the blended income from both parts. Semi-commercial bridging covers a quick purchase, an auction lot or a property that needs works before it will support a term loan, usually from around 0.70 to 0.95 percent a month. For landlords holding several mixed-use or part-commercial assets, portfolio finance consolidates them under one facility. Once an asset is stabilised and let, a semi-commercial remortgage moves it onto a keener rate and releases equity for the next purchase in Greater Manchester.
Mixed-use assets we finance across Bury
Each kind of mixed-use asset is treated differently by different lenders, and we arrange finance for all of them in Bury and across Greater Manchester. That covers the classic shop with a flat above, offices with residential upper floors, pubs and guest houses with owner or letting accommodation, restaurants and takeaways with flats, retail parades with residential uppers, HMOs above commercial units, surgeries and professional premises with living space, and larger mixed-use blocks. The key question every lender asks is how much of the property, by floor area or value, is residential against commercial, because that split decides which desk will lend and on what terms. Local planning records show 9 residential units in the Bury pipeline, a measure of the mixed-use and conversion activity that drives demand for this kind of finance in the area.
Finance we arrange for Bury property
- Semi-commercial mortgage
- Mixed-use mortgage
- Semi-commercial investment mortgage
- Owner-occupier semi-commercial mortgage
- Semi-commercial bridging
- Bridge-to-let finance
- Light refurbishment finance
- Heavy refurbishment finance
- Semi-commercial development finance
- Semi-commercial remortgage
- Semi-commercial portfolio finance
What the Bury market means for a semi-commercial valuation
Bury is a value market within Greater Manchester, where keener prices can lift the yield on a mixed-use asset. Lenders will look closely at the strength of the commercial tenancy and the lettability of the residential space, so clear local evidence, of the kind set out below, helps secure competitive terms here.
The residential element: what local values tell a lender
The flats and living space within a semi-commercial asset are valued against local residential evidence, so sold-price depth is a direct input on a mixed-use deal. Bury recorded around 1,943 residential sales over the past year at a median of £230,000, which makes the local market steady. New-build stock carries a premium of -18% over existing stock here. The commercial element of the property, by contrast, is valued on its tenant, lease and yield, which we assess case by case.
This residential evidence values the living space within a mixed-use property and gauges how readily it would let or sell. It is not a guide to the commercial unit's value, which is tenant and covenant driven.
Residential sold price by type (Bury)
| Detached | £381,000 |
| Semi-detached | £265,000 |
| Terraced | £180,175 |
| Flat / apartment | £126,000 |
Source: HM Land Registry residential price-paid data, last 12 months.
Recent price trend
| Quarter | Median | Sales |
|---|---|---|
| 2024-Q2 | £220k | 726 |
| 2024-Q3 | £235k | 835 |
| 2024-Q4 | £230k | 798 |
| 2025-Q1 | £245k | 877 |
| 2025-Q2 | £220k | 604 |
| 2025-Q3 | £230k | 665 |
| 2025-Q4 | £235k | 594 |
| 2026-Q1 | £220k | 339 |
Mixed-use and residential pipeline across Greater Manchester
Relevant planning activity recorded by Bury Council, a read on local conversion and mixed-use development that drives demand for semi-commercial finance.
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Land at Hazel Hall Lane, Ramsbottom
Application for permission in principle for the erection of 8-9 dwellings
View on the planning portal →
Recent residential sales in Bury postcodes
A sample of recent residential transactions across BL9, M45, M26, BL8, M8, evidence for valuing the residential element of a semi-commercial property rather than a guide to commercial values.
| Address | Postcode | Type | Price | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7, INGLEWHITE CLOSE | BL9 9NT | Detached | £239,950 | 27 March 2026 |
| 69, WINGATE DRIVE | M45 7GX | Semi-detached | £320,000 | 27 March 2026 |
| 292, LEVER STREET | M26 4PT | Terraced | £150,000 | 26 March 2026 |
| 31, CHURCH STREET | BL8 3BN | Terraced | £130,000 | 25 March 2026 |
| 7, MOSSLEE AVENUE | M8 4LQ | Semi-detached | £265,000 | 23 March 2026 |
| 5, CROFT LANE | BL9 8BU | Terraced | £152,000 | 23 March 2026 |
| 4, BARKER STREET | BL9 0TX | Terraced | £160,000 | 23 March 2026 |
| FLAT 19, ASHWORTH COURT, ASHWORTH STREET | M26 2XZ | Flat / apartment | £80,000 | 20 March 2026 |
| 76, CHESHAM ROAD | BL9 6NA | Terraced | £145,000 | 20 March 2026 |
| 22, STRETTON ROAD | BL0 9SX | Detached | £340,000 | 20 March 2026 |
Semi-commercial mortgages in Bury: common questions
How much can I borrow on a semi-commercial mortgage in Bury?
Most lenders fund up to 70 to 75 percent of value on a semi-commercial mortgage, with the loan sized on the combined commercial and residential rent at an interest cover ratio. The Bury residential market, currently steady, informs the value a lender will place on the residential element of a mixed-use asset.
Which lenders offer semi-commercial mortgages in Bury?
We hold more than one hundred lender relationships across high street banks, challenger banks and specialist lenders. The right lender for a Bury semi-commercial deal depends on the commercial-to-residential split, the leverage you need and whether you borrow personally or through a limited company, and we shortlist the desks most likely to fund it across Greater Manchester.
How does the Bury residential market affect a mixed-use property?
It matters because the flats and living space within a semi-commercial asset are valued against local residential evidence. HM Land Registry records a £230,000 residential median in Bury over the past year across roughly 1,943 sales, with flats around £126,000. The commercial element, by contrast, is valued on its tenant, lease and yield, which we assess case by case.
Do you arrange semi-commercial finance beyond Bury?
Yes. We arrange semi-commercial and mixed-use mortgages across the whole of Greater Manchester and the wider UK, with the same approach: assess the commercial and residential split, model the combined income, and match the case to the lenders that treat that asset well.
Buying or refinancing in Bury?
Send us the property details and we will come back with a view on lenders and likely terms within one working day.