Pub and Restaurant Mortgages Sheffield
Specialist licensed-trade commercial mortgages for freehold pubs, gastropubs, wet-led pubs and restaurants. Underwriting uses barrelage, full-trading EBITDA, license type, beer-tie status and freehold-versus-leasehold structure. Different lenders dominate different sub-niches, getting the right desk first time matters more here than almost any other commercial sub-sector.
LTV
60 to 65%
Cover test
EBITDA 1.5 to 2.0x
Rate range
7.0 to 8.5% pa
Facility
£300K to £3M
Underwriting a Sheffield pub commercial mortgage
Pubs and restaurants are the most specialised sub-segment of trading-business commercial mortgages, and the one where lender choice matters most. The credit decision turns on five variables: barrelage (annual beer volume, the proxy for wet-led trade), full-trading EBITDA, license type (premises, on-sales, off-sales, late-night, sui generis nightclub), beer-tie status (free-of-tie versus tied to a brewery or pub-co), and freehold-versus-leasehold structure. Different lenders dominate different sub-niches.
Free-of-tie freehold pubs sit at the keenest pricing, the operator owns the asset outright and controls the supply contracts, giving the lender comfort on margin and recovery options. Typical 60 to 65% LTV at 7.5 to 8.5% pa. Tied pubs price 50 to 100bps wider because tied beer prices compress operator margin. Tenanted leasehold pubs are narrowest, only one or two specialist desks engage, and pricing reflects the limited recovery options. Gastropubs with strong food revenue (45%+ of turnover from food) sit closer to mainstream restaurant pricing, the food margin smooths what would otherwise be wet-led volatility.
Worked example: a free-of-tie freehold gastropub on Ecclesall Road S11, £950K valuation, full-trading EBITDA £165K (60% food / 40% wet), 280 barrels per annum. Cynergy Bank placed at 65% LTV, 8.0% pa on a 5-year fix, 20-year term. EBITDA cover 1.75x. Worked example two: a wet-led tied freehold on West Street in the Devonshire Quarter S1, £620K valuation, EBITDA £85K, 420 barrels per annum. Tighter case, placed via ASK Partners at 60% LTV, 8.85% pa, 15-year term.
Recent independent F&B growth across the Devonshire Quarter (Division Street, West Street, Carver Street), the Kelham Island microbrewery cluster around the Kelham Island Museum and Cornerstone, the Cathedral Quarter, Ecclesall Road S11 independents and the Broomhill S10 student-led trade all feed Sheffield licensed-trade refinance flow. Cathedral Quarter heritage venues carry boutique stock at a different price point; Division Street the mass-market late-night cluster. Bramall Lane (Sheffield United FC) and Hillsborough Stadium (Sheffield Wednesday FC) hospitality routes through the leisure category for stadium-and-arena sub-niche underwriting.
Pub and restaurant assets we fund
Free-of-tie freehold pub
Best-priced licensed-trade asset class. Owner-operator EBITDA-led, full margin control on supply contracts.
Tied freehold pub
Tied to brewery or pub-co supply contract; tighter operator margin, 50 to 100bps pricing penalty versus free-of-tie.
Tenanted leasehold pub
Operating leasehold from pub-co landlord; narrowest lender pool, specialist desks only.
Gastropub / restaurant-led pub
Food revenue 45%+ of turnover. EBITDA from food-led operations rather than pure wet-led barrelage. Ecclesall Road, Sharrow Vale, Broomhill, Hillsborough Middlewood Road corridors.
Independent restaurant
Operator-led restaurant business and freehold. Trading-business underwrite on covers per session, margin and EBITDA. Devonshire Quarter, Kelham Island, Cathedral Quarter.
Microbrewery and taproom
Kelham Island microbrewery scene, Cornerstone-adjacent taproom stock. Class E to sui generis change-of-use deals on converted industrial space.
Finance structures for Sheffield pubs and restaurants
Predominantly trading-business mortgage on owner-operator EBITDA. Investment route applies where the pub is let on FRI to a chain operator with covenant strength. Bridge-to-let funds vacant pub acquisition or change-of-use scenarios with a clear stabilisation plan.
Trading-business mortgage
Owner-operator pubs, gastropubs and restaurants, EBITDA, barrelage and license type underwritten.
Commercial investment mortgage
Pub or restaurant let on FRI to a chain operator (Greene King, Mitchells & Butlers, Stonegate, JD Wetherspoon).
Commercial bridge-to-let
Vacant pub acquisition, change-of-use deals or refurbishment before stabilisation; exit onto term trading-business mortgage.
Commercial remortgage
End-of-fix or capital raise on existing pub freehold; commonly funds extension, kitchen refurbishment or onward acquisition.
The Sheffield licensed-trade economy
Sheffield carries one of the deepest licensed-trade economies in the North of England, supported by the two-universities student catchment and a substantial dual-income professional base. The Devonshire Quarter (Division Street, West Street, Carver Street) dominates independent F&B and the late-night licensed strip. Kelham Island (Sunday Times best neighbourhood in Britain) anchors the microbrewery cluster around the Kelham Island Museum, Cornerstone and the converted-warehouse venue stock. The Cathedral Quarter carries heritage F&B alongside the Cole Brothers and Heart of the City II hospitality offer. Ecclesall Road in S11, Sharrow Vale Road in S11 and Broomhill in S10 hold the suburban independent F&B spines, mixed with student-led and dual-income professional catchments. Hillsborough Middlewood Road in S6 carries the sports-tourism licensed trade for Hillsborough Stadium (Sheffield Wednesday FC) match-day. The change-of-use pipeline across Kelham Island and the wider Castlegate masterplan continually re-purposes converted industrial space to leisure and venue use; these become commercial mortgage refinance candidates the moment the new lease completes and a 6-month trading record is in place.
Lender appetite for Sheffield pubs and restaurants
<strong>Cynergy Bank</strong> is the most active named lender for Sheffield licensed-trade, strong appetite on free-of-tie freehold pubs and gastropubs at 7.5 to 8.5% pa, 60 to 65% LTV. ASK Partners and Allica's licensed-trade desk compete strongly on the same profile. <strong>Together</strong> covers more challenged cases (tied pubs, shorter trading history, secondary location) at wider pricing. <strong>Shawbrook</strong> takes selective licensed-trade where the operator track record is strong and food revenue dominates. Hampshire Trust Bank active on multi-site restaurant operator portfolios. High-street commercial desks (NatWest, Lloyds, Barclays) do not engage with owner-operator pubs at all; they will look at investment-let pub assets where a chain operator has a long FRI lease in place.
Pub & Restaurant FAQs
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