Hospitality Property Finance in Great Yarmouth
Commercial mortgages, bridging, development finance and refinance for hotels, pubs, restaurants, guest houses and holiday businesses in Great Yarmouth. Finance against the trading asset and the income it produces, not a regulated home loan.
If you are buying, opening, repositioning or refinancing a hospitality business in Great Yarmouth, from a hotel or aparthotel to a pub, restaurant or holiday park, we arrange the finance. We work across Great Yarmouth and the wider Norfolk market, sizing the facility on the fair maintainable trade the asset produces and the going-concern value it supports, then placing it with the lender most likely to fund the format. We arrange commercial mortgages, acquisition and refurbishment bridging, development finance and refinances against the trade, not a personal mortgage.
A Great Yarmouth hospitality business is bought and refinanced on its trade, so a lender values it as a going concern on its fair maintainable trade and the EBITDA it produces, not just its bricks and mortar. The local property market is the evidence an underwriter reads for asset values and exit liquidity: Great Yarmouth recorded around 1,179 property transactions over the last twelve months at a median of £205,000 (HM Land Registry). That is general market-depth evidence, a read on values, price bands and how readily an asset sells or refinances here, not a measure of hotel or pub trade, which turns on occupancy, covers and margin.
How we fund a Great Yarmouth hospitality business, from purchase to refinance
We arrange the full range of hospitality finance structures for Great Yarmouth operators and investors. A commercial mortgage funds the purchase or refinance of a freehold trading business, sized on the debt service cover the fair maintainable trade supports over a long term. Acquisition and refurbishment bridging buys a going concern at speed and funds the works and the trade build before a term refinance. Development finance funds a new build or a major conversion, drawn against a monitoring surveyor. A cash-out refinance releases equity once the trade stabilises and the going-concern value reflects it. Where the equity gap is wide, we arrange mezzanine or preferred equity behind the senior debt. We place each case with the lenders that fund the format across Norfolk, rather than steering every deal to one name.
The hospitality assets we finance in Great Yarmouth
Hospitality lending turns on the trade, and the trade looks different in every format. We arrange finance for all of them in Great Yarmouth and across Norfolk: hotels, aparthotels, boutique and resort or spa hotels trading on occupancy, average daily rate and RevPAR; guest houses, bed and breakfasts and holiday lets building a seasonal visitor income; holiday and caravan parks running on recurring pitch-fee income and lodge sales; hostels and serviced accommodation on blended bed and stay income; and pubs, bars, restaurants, cafes, takeaways and wedding or event venues valued on fair maintainable trade and an EBITDA multiple. A hotel turns on RevPAR and flow-through to profit. A pub turns on its wet and dry split. A holiday let or park turns on the season and the visitor economy. Knowing which lender funds which format here, and at what leverage against the going-concern value, is the work we do before a case reaches a credit committee. Local planning records show 53 commercial-relevant schemes in the Great Yarmouth pipeline carrying around 186 units and an estimated £38,025,000 of development value, a signal of local investment and the forward supply of hospitality and mixed-use space that will need funding as it comes forward.
Finance we arrange for Great Yarmouth operators
Hospitality assets we finance
What lenders test on a Great Yarmouth hospitality loan
A hospitality lender underwrites the trade first: the fair maintainable trade a reasonably efficient operator would achieve, the EBITDA it produces, and the debt service cover that income gives against the loan. It then weighs the tenure, whether freehold, leasehold or tied, and takes the going-concern value against the property's alternative-use value as a backstop. We frame the facility around the maintainable trade, the going-concern valuation and the exit or refinance beneath it. The national backdrop gives context: around £5bn of UK hotels changed hands in 2025 (Savills, 2025), a read on how liquid a hospitality sale or refinance is. UK hotel occupancy held near 76.1% (STR, 2025), evidence of the demand behind the trade.
Before you commit to a hospitality facility on a Great Yarmouth asset, the checks that matter are the realism of the trading projections and the fair maintainable trade behind them, the debt service cover headroom once costs and seasonality are allowed for, the going-concern valuation against the bricks-and-mortar fallback, the tenure and any lease or tie, and the strength of the exit or refinance. We pressure-test these as part of arranging the finance, because the same things an operator should weigh are the things a lender underwrites.
What the Great Yarmouth and East of England market means for hospitality funding
Great Yarmouth is a steady market for asset values and an exit: around 1,179 property transactions over the last twelve months at a median of £205,000 (HM Land Registry), concentrated across the NR30, NR29, NR31 postcode areas. We read that as general evidence of local values, price bands and liquidity, the backdrop to a going-concern valuation, not as hospitality trade. Cambridge leads a high-value visitor market on academic and science tourism, with the Norfolk and Suffolk coast a major holiday-let, guest-house and caravan-park economy. High-value city demand alongside one of the strongest coastal staycation economies. Nationally, inbound visitors are forecast to have spent £33.7bn in 2025 (VisitBritain, 2025), the visitor economy that underpins hotel, guest house and holiday-let demand. Short-term and bridging lending is a deep market nationally, with the loan book at a record £13.7bn (BDLA, Q3 2025), so a well-structured Great Yarmouth acquisition or refurbishment case has a competitive field of lenders behind it. We read this local evidence alongside the asset's own trade when we size and place a Great Yarmouth facility.
- Cambridge academic and science tourism
- Norfolk and Suffolk coastal staycation demand
- Deep holiday-let and guest-house base
The local market in Great Yarmouth and your exit
Local sold-price data is general evidence an underwriter reads for asset values, price bands and exit liquidity, because a hospitality facility is repaid by a refinance or a sale that depends on the local market. Great Yarmouth recorded around 1,179 property transactions over the past year at a median of £205,000, which makes the local market steady for an exit. That is market-depth context, not a measure of hotel or pub trade, which turns on occupancy, covers and margin.
Values and liquidity set the backdrop to a going-concern valuation. A deeper, more liquid market gives a commercial mortgage lender or a buyer more confidence, which in turn supports leverage while the trade builds to its mature fair maintainable level.
Sold price by property type (Great Yarmouth)
| Detached | £320,000 |
| Semi-detached | £223,750 |
| Terraced | £155,000 |
| Flat / apartment | £100,000 |
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
| Quarter | Median | Sales |
|---|---|---|
| 2024-Q3 | £220k | 484 |
| 2024-Q4 | £214k | 531 |
| 2025-Q1 | £207k | 553 |
| 2025-Q2 | £200k | 392 |
| 2025-Q3 | £209k | 438 |
| 2025-Q4 | £201k | 400 |
| 2026-Q1 | £200k | 277 |
| 2026-Q2 | £195k | 96 |
Development pipeline near Great Yarmouth
Recent planning activity recorded by Great Yarmouth Borough Council, a signal of local investment and the forward supply of hospitality and mixed-use space that will need funding as it comes forward.
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James Paget Hospital, Lowestoft Road, Gorleston, Great Yarmouth, NR31 6LA
The proposed GP Streaming unit would constitute a single storey building, located to the south of the main JPUH building. The building would measure 3 metres height and be 180 sqm in area (18.08 metres by 10.06 metres). The proposed use of the building would b…
View on the planning portal → -
James Paget Hospital, Lowestoft Road, Gorleston, Great Yarmouth, NR31 6LA
Erection of 2-storey building for use as Urgent Treatment Centre (Class C2), covered walkway and new lobby to front of existing hospital, associated infrastructure, reprovision of displaced accessible car parking, and landscaping. Removal of existing GP Stream…
View on the planning portal → -
36 Perebrown Avenue, Great Yarmouth, NR30 4BE
Sub division of garden and construction of attached dwelling with detached garage. Renewal of Planning Permission 06/22/0486/F.
View on the planning portal → -
St Nicholas Church, Church Plain, Great Yarmouth, NR30 1NE
Install black-finished stainless steel grills on the ten northside windows of Great Yarmouth Minster. Replace the old fibreglass window covers on the 2 east side clergy vestry windows.
View on the planning portal → -
35 36 South Quay Surgery, South Quay, Great Yarmouth, NR30 2RG
Removal of Condition 6 (highway improvement works) of pp. 06/19/0450/F (Variation of condition 2 of PP-06/16/0593/F - Replacement of old drawings with new ones and condition 3 of PP- 06/16/0593/F - Residential units to be changed from 14 to 11 revised from: Re…
View on the planning portal → -
Central Library And Tolhouse Museum, Tolhouse Street, Great Yarmouth, NR30 2SH
Application for a Certificate of Lawful Proposed Use or Development -Construction and installation of fire protecting walls and doors.
View on the planning portal →
Hospitality finance in Great Yarmouth: common questions
What is hospitality finance and when would a Great Yarmouth business need it?
Hospitality finance is funding for a trading hospitality business, a hotel, pub, restaurant, guest house, holiday let or similar, arranged as a commercial mortgage, bridging or development facility. A Great Yarmouth business needs it to buy a going concern, fund a build or refurbishment, or refinance and release equity. A lender values the asset on a going-concern basis, on the fair maintainable trade it produces, and sizes the loan on the income and the exit.
How much can I borrow to buy a hospitality business in Great Yarmouth?
Commercial mortgages on a freehold trading business are usually sized on the debt service cover the fair maintainable trade supports, commonly to around 60 to 70 percent of the going-concern value depending on the format, the strength of the trade and the tenure. Leasehold and operationally intense formats attract narrower leverage. We hold more than one hundred lender relationships and shortlist the desks most likely to back a Great Yarmouth case. All terms are indicative and never an offer.
How do lenders value a hotel or pub in Great Yarmouth?
On a going-concern basis: a valuer assesses the fair maintainable trade a reasonably efficient operator would achieve, applies an EBITDA multiple, and cross-checks against comparable sales and the property's bricks-and-mortar value. For a hotel that means occupancy, average daily rate and RevPAR; for a pub, the wet and dry split. The trade drives the value and the loan, not a simple property price.
Can I get bridging finance to buy a Great Yarmouth hospitality asset quickly?
Yes. We arrange acquisition and refurbishment bridging to buy a going concern at speed, fund the works and carry the trade build, then refinance onto a commercial mortgage once the trade is evidenced. It suits an auction purchase, a distressed or part-traded asset, or a reposition. We structure the bridge and the exit together so the refinance is set before the bridge is drawn on a Great Yarmouth deal.
Which lenders provide hospitality finance in Great Yarmouth?
We arrange across clearing and challenger banks, specialist trading-business lenders and debt funds that understand hospitality trade. The right lender for a Great Yarmouth asset depends on the format, the strength of the trade, the tenure, the leverage you need and the exit. We match the case to the desks that actively fund the format across Norfolk, rather than steering every deal to one name.
What is the property market like in Great Yarmouth?
Great Yarmouth recorded around 1,179 property transactions over the last twelve months at a median of £205,000 (HM Land Registry), a steady market with values typically in the value band. We treat that as general evidence of local asset values and liquidity, the backdrop to a going-concern valuation and a refinance or sale, rather than a measure of hospitality trade, which turns on the individual business.
Do you only arrange finance in Great Yarmouth?
No. We arrange hospitality commercial mortgages, bridging, development and refinance across the whole of Norfolk and the wider UK, with the same approach: read the trade and the going-concern value, match the case to the lenders that fund the format, and negotiate terms on the operator's behalf.
Hospitality finance near Great Yarmouth
The nearest towns and cities we cover, each with its own local market and exit picture.
Financing a hospitality business in Great Yarmouth?
Send us the asset, the trade and the plan and we will come back with a view on fundability and likely terms within one working day.