Holiday Let & Serviced Accommodation Finance in Bury
Funding for holiday lets and serviced accommodation in Bury: holiday let mortgages, serviced accommodation mortgages, bridging, development finance and remortgages.
Looking for funding on a holiday let or serviced accommodation in Bury? Bury sits in Greater Manchester, within the North West holiday let and serviced accommodation market. We are a finance arranger, not a lender: we arrange holiday let mortgages and the full range of serviced accommodation finance on Bury property, from purchase and bridging through development to remortgage, across Greater Manchester.
Every deal we arrange is grounded in the market evidence. Indicative average daily rates run at about 175 £/night (North West, AirDNA, UK Short-Term Rental Outlook, 2025) and occupancy at about 64% (North West, AirDNA, UK Short-Term Rental Outlook, 2025), and we then underwrite the specific Bury property, its income and its catchment, on its own merits.
Holiday let mortgages on Bury short-let property
A holiday let mortgage is the core way to buy or refinance serviced accommodation in Bury. We arrange purchase finance for holiday lets and short-term lets, typically to around 70 to 75 percent of value, and remortgages that release equity or cut the rate as income grows. Unlike a standard buy-to-let, a holiday let mortgage is assessed on the projected short-let income, usually the average of low, mid and high-season weekly rates, rather than a single assured-shorthold rent, so the lender wants a credible letting projection from a managing agent or a comparable-evidence study. Established owners can release equity as the trading record builds, and first-time buyers can fund a purchase against a professional projection. We place each holiday let with the lender that prices Bury serviced accommodation best across Greater Manchester.
Cottages, city apartments and aparthotels across Greater Manchester
Each type of serviced accommodation is underwritten differently. We arrange finance for coastal and rural holiday cottages, city-centre short-let apartments, aparthotels, guest houses and multi-property portfolios in Bury and across Greater Manchester. A single stabilised cottage with a two-year letting history and a new city-centre serviced apartment held in a company are credit-assessed in very different ways, and knowing which lender backs each format is the work we do before a deal reaches credit. Around around 80% of holiday-let demand is domestic staycation trips (VisitEngland, GB Tourism Survey, 2024), which is why well-located Bury stock lets reliably year after year.
Finance we arrange in Bury
How much you can borrow against a Bury holiday let
On a holiday let in Bury, a holiday let mortgage usually reaches around 70 to 75 percent of value, so you would budget for a deposit of roughly a quarter to a third of the price plus costs. The figure is driven by the projected short-let income and the lender's interest cover test, not the postcode. Where a property is being converted to serviced accommodation, or bought at speed or at auction, bridging finance secures it quickly and a holiday let mortgage follows once it is trading, and development finance funds a ground-up or major-conversion scheme to around 65 to 75 percent of cost. Since the furnished holiday lettings tax regime was abolished in April 2025, many investors now hold holiday lets in a limited company; lenders are comfortable with company borrowing and we arrange both routes. Interest rates depend on the lender, the leverage and the income, so we quote them deal by deal rather than as a headline rate. We size the right facility, rate and deposit for your Bury deal.
Where serviced accommodation lets well in Bury
Bury's famous market has been trading under a licence first granted in 1444, and the town remains the spiritual home of black pudding, with local producers supplying retailers as far afield as Harrods. Bury is reached via M66 J2, M66 J3 and A56, and good access plus a recognisable destination are exactly what drive the bookings and nightly rates a short let can achieve. Guests are drawn to Bury's neighbourhoods and surrounds, from Elton, Walmersley, Fishpool and Redvales, and the strongest-performing serviced accommodation tends to sit where visitor demand concentrates. Any change of use, planning or short-term-let licensing question is determined by Bury Council, and a lender will want the position confirmed where it applies.
Holiday let demand signals in Bury
Buying a holiday let in Bury starts with the local property market: HM Land Registry price paid data puts the median sale price in the area at £230,000, across 1,943 residential transactions in the last twelve months, which sets the entry price a holiday let mortgage is sized against. For income context, Sykes reports indicative gross annual earnings of around 28000 £/yr for a well-run North West holiday let (Sykes Holiday Cottages, Staycation Index 2025, 2025), though Bury figures depend on the specific property, its size and its occupancy. Around around 80% of UK holiday-let demand is domestic (VisitEngland, GB Tourism Survey, 2024), which keeps well-located North West stock letting through the year.
Bury holiday let market profile
- Licensing / planning authorityBury Council
- AccessM66 J2, M66 J3, A56, A58
- Local median price£230,000 · 1,943 sales (12m)
Location facts and Land Registry data. Market figures shown are national or North West-level, not Bury-specific.
The North West holiday let market
Bury is an established holiday-let market within North West, the kind of catchment lenders are comfortable underwriting. Trading short lets with a letting history attract competitive holiday let mortgage pricing, while bridging and development finance suit conversions and ground-up plays where the exit onto a holiday let mortgage is clear.
The Lake District and Cumbria make the North West one of the strongest rural holiday-let markets in the UK, while Manchester and Liverpool drive a deep city-break and serviced-apartment market.
The North West pairs one of the UK's best rural holiday-let markets, the Lake District, with two of its strongest city-break markets in Manchester and Liverpool, on indicative occupancy in the mid 60s and average daily rates around £175 (AirDNA 2025). Lakeland cottages trade on year-round walking and tourism demand and report owner earnings well above the UK average, while Manchester and Liverpool serviced apartments run on events, sport and corporate travel. We fund Lakeland cottage purchases and conversions, city-centre aparthotel and serviced-apartment schemes, and portfolios that span the two, and lender appetite across the region is deep.
Market commentary and figures for North West are drawn from AirDNA (UK Short-Term Rental Outlook, 2025); Sykes Holiday Cottages (Staycation Index, 2025).
Sources and methodology
Holiday let market figures are published nationally or regionally, not per town, so the nightly rates, occupancy and yields on this page are presented as context for a Bury appraisal and attributed to their sources (AirDNA, UK Short-Term Rental Outlook; Sykes Holiday Cottages / Savills leisure research). Town-level facts are different: access, the licensing or planning authority and the Land Registry sale-price data are genuinely local and sourced. We do not publish a Bury-specific occupancy or yield as if it were measured. Across the UK there are around ~300,000 listings active short-term-let listings (AirDNA, UK Short-Term Rental Outlook, 2025).
Holiday let finance in Bury: common questions
Can you get a mortgage on a holiday let in Bury?
Yes. A holiday let in Bury is financed with a specialist holiday let mortgage sized on the projected short-let income rather than a standard residential or buy-to-let loan. We arrange them for investors buying or refinancing serviced accommodation, typically to around 70 to 75 percent of value, and we place each one with a lender that genuinely backs the sector.
How much deposit do I need to buy a holiday let in Bury?
Most holiday let lenders advance around 70 to 75 percent of value on a Bury property, so plan for a deposit of roughly 25 to 30 percent of the price plus costs. A property with a strong letting projection or trading record supports the top of the range; a conversion or a property with no history is funded more cautiously, sometimes via bridging first.
What are Bury holiday let finance rates and terms?
Rates depend on the lender, the leverage and the strength of the projected income, so we quote them deal by deal rather than as a headline. Indicatively, holiday let mortgages run on commercial terms from the high single digits, development finance from around 8 percent and bridging from around 0.75 percent per month, with terms from months on a bridge to 25 years on a mortgage. For market context, indicative UK average daily rates run at ~£170 a night (AirDNA, UK Short-Term Rental Outlook, 2025).
Can I convert a property to serviced accommodation in Bury?
Often, yes, but check the planning and licensing position first: some areas require planning permission for a change to short-let use, and Scotland and parts of Wales and London have specific licensing or letting-threshold rules. Conversions are usually funded with bridging or development finance against the cost of works, refinancing onto a holiday let mortgage once the property is trading. We arrange both routes across Greater Manchester.
Funding a holiday let in Bury?
Send us the outline and we will come back with a view on fundability and likely terms within one working day.