Castle Trust launches new 'Bridge the Gap' product
The 12-month bridging loan offers a reduced interest rate.

Castle Trust Bank has launched a new ‘Bridge the Gap’ product, providing a solution for borrowers who are approaching the end of a current fixed rate or bridging loan but are reluctant to lock into a new buy-to-let mortgage due to expectations of rate reductions during 2024.
The product will also be useful for property investors who want to gain a letting track record on the property before committing to a long-term loan, as some lenders will want to see at least 12-months’ worth of borrowing history before offering terms.
The bridging loan features a term of 12 months, with serviced interest, a reduced interest rate of 0.52% pcm (equivalent to an annual rate of 6.24%), and ERCs for just three months.
This option to service the loan enables property investors to borrow more on day one, with the maximum available loan being 75% LTV, including arrangement fee. Where interest is rolled up, the maximum loan is 75% LTV gross. The arrangement fee is 5.5% with no exit fee.
Anna Lewis, commercial director at Castle Trust Bank, said: “Bridge the Gap is a product that specifically addresses a growing demand that brokers are seeing for bridging finance that can buy property investors time whilst they wait in hope that rates will continue to fall in the next year.
“By introducing a 12-month bridge loan with a reduced interest rate, increased arrangement fee and no exit fee, we can provide investors with the flexibility that they need to best manage the rate cycle. If investors have tenants currently paying rent, they could opt to service the loan payments instead of rolling the interest as the monthly payments on Bridge the Gap are more affordable, aligning with rates currently available in the buy-to-let market."

Breaking news
Direct to your inbox:
More
stories
you'll love:
This week's biggest stories:
Buy-to-let
The Mortgage Works launches sub-3% buy-to-let rates

Tax
HMRC rule change set to impact millions of landlords and sole traders

HSBC
HSBC launches over two dozen sub-4% mortgage rates

April Mortgages
April Mortgages launches 7x loan-to-income lending

Bank Of England
Bank of England cuts interest rates by 0.25%Â in three-way vote

Pension
Government announces plans to consolidate small pension pots
