Care Home Finance in Bath
Commercial mortgages, development, bridging, refinance and going-concern operator finance for care homes in Bath. This is finance for the home as a business, not help with care fees.
Care home finance in Bath is the funding used to buy, build, refinance or operate a care home as a trading business. We arrange it across Somerset for operators, buyers, investors and developers, structuring the debt a home needs and placing it with the lenders that actually back the sector. This is commercial lending against the home and its operator, not help with paying care fees.
Care home lending is underwritten on the operator covenant, the CQC rating, occupancy and the fee mix, not on bricks alone. In the South West, the average weekly fee runs at about £1,350/wk (Knight Frank, 2025), and occupancy across mature homes nationally sat at 88.7% (Knight Frank, FY2024/25). Those regional and national figures frame the trading case a Bath home needs to support its borrowing.
Funding a Bath care home across its lifecycle
We arrange the full range of care home finance for Bath operators and buyers. A commercial mortgage funds the purchase of a trading home, typically to 70 to 75 percent of value over a 15 to 25 year term, with the loan sized on the home's stabilised trading profit. Development finance funds a ground-up build, extension or conversion, usually to 60 to 70 percent of cost. Bridging moves at auction or pre-CQC pace. Refinance lowers a rate, raises capital or exits a bridge. Going-concern operator finance is sized on EBITDARM and the going-concern value rather than the property alone, and sale-and-leaseback releases capital from a freehold while the operator keeps running the home. We match each case to the lenders that back this kind of home across Somerset.
The care settings we fund in Bath
Each care setting is registered, run and underwritten differently, and we arrange finance for all of them in Bath and across Somerset. That covers elderly residential and nursing homes, dementia and memory care, specialist and high-acuity care, supported living, learning disability and mental health settings, children's homes, and retirement and extra-care schemes. A nursing home turns on clinical staffing and acuity. A children's home turns on Ofsted standing and local-authority commissioning. Knowing which lender backs which setting here, and at what leverage, is the work we do before a case ever reaches a credit committee.
Finance we arrange for Bath homes
What the South West care market means for funding in Bath
High fees, strong occupancy and the second-highest share of CQC Outstanding homes. An ageing population and strong ratings underpin dependable demand. Average weekly fees in the South West run at about £1,350/wk, up 6.2% year on year (Knight Frank, 2025). Lenders read these regional fee and occupancy trends, alongside the home's own trading record, when they size a facility for a Bath home.
- Older demographic profile across the region
- Strong occupancy
- High share of well-rated homes
The local property market in Bath
Local house prices are a useful proxy for the strength of the self-funder catchment a care home draws on. Bath recorded around 1,216 residential sales over the past year at a median of £427,750, which makes the local market steady. A deeper, higher-value residential market tends to support a larger private and self-funded fee base, one input among the operator covenant, CQC rating and occupancy that drive a lending decision.
This residential data is local catchment context. It is not a care home valuation, which turns on the home's trading profit and going-concern value, assessed by a specialist healthcare valuer.
Residential sold price by type (Bath)
| Detached | £700,000 |
| Semi-detached | £475,000 |
| Terraced | £420,000 |
| Flat / apartment | £304,000 |
Source: HM Land Registry residential price-paid data, last 12 months. Local catchment context, not a care home valuation.
Recent price trend
| Quarter | Median | Sales |
|---|---|---|
| 2024-Q2 | £455k | 437 |
| 2024-Q3 | £448k | 550 |
| 2024-Q4 | £412k | 590 |
| 2025-Q1 | £425k | 632 |
| 2025-Q2 | £412k | 310 |
| 2025-Q3 | £446k | 433 |
| 2025-Q4 | £430k | 399 |
| 2026-Q1 | £403k | 204 |
Care home finance in Bath: common questions
How much can I borrow to buy a care home in Bath?
Most lenders fund up to 70 to 75 percent of value on a trading care home, with the loan sized on the home's stabilised trading profit (EBITDARM) rather than the bricks alone. Leverage reflects the operator covenant, the CQC rating, occupancy and the fee mix. We hold more than one hundred lender relationships and shortlist the desks most likely to back a Bath home.
Which lenders provide care home finance in Bath?
We work across high-street and challenger banks, specialist healthcare lenders and debt funds, including names such as Shawbrook, OakNorth, Allica Bank and Assetz Capital. The right lender for a Bath home depends on the setting, the operator's track record and the leverage you need, and we match the case to the desks that actively back it across Somerset.
What are care home fees and occupancy like around Bath?
Care figures are reported regionally rather than town by town. In the South West, the average weekly fee runs at about £1,350/wk and has risen 6.2% year on year (Knight Frank, 2025), while occupancy across mature homes nationally held at 88.7% (Knight Frank, FY2024/25). We read these regional and national figures alongside the individual home's trading record.
Do you only arrange finance in Bath?
No. We arrange care home finance across the whole of Somerset and the wider UK, with the same approach: read the home and the operator, match the case to the lenders that back the setting, and negotiate terms on the borrower's behalf.
Funding a care home in Bath?
Send us the home and the operator and we will come back with a view on fundability and likely terms within one working day.