Published 14 July 2026 · Last reviewed 14 July 2026
Key takeaways
- A bridging loan is FCA-regulated when the security property is, or is intended to be, occupied as a dwelling by the borrower or a close family member. That is the statutory test under Article 61 of the Regulated Activities Order — it follows the property, not the borrower’s preference.
- Regulation brings real protections: MCOB-driven affordability and suitability checks, a written record of the recommendation, and a route to the Financial Ombudsman Service if something goes wrong on a regulated case. Unregulated cases sit outside that perimeter and the borrower is treated as a business client.
- Niche Advice Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, FRN 750263, and has been a broker since 2008. You can verify our registration on the FCA Register.
- Regulated bridging is not automatically more expensive or much slower than unregulated — those are the common myths. In the cases we see, the lender shortlist for principal-residence regulated bridging is often competitive at the same loan-to-value.
- Because regulation follows the property and the intended occupier, the same borrower can have a regulated bridge on one transaction and an unregulated bridge on another. Framing the case correctly is the first thing we do.
What this article does
“FCA-regulated bridging” is one of the most-searched bridging terms in the UK, and most of the top results either lift a definition out of a lender PDF or sell you a product before they explain the line. This article does the opposite. It walks through what “regulated” actually means for a bridging loan, the case shapes that fall inside the perimeter by default, the case shapes that sit outside it, the protections the regulated side gives you, and what our broker process looks like on a regulated case. As always, this is general information, not advice on your situation.
What “FCA-regulated” actually means for a bridging loan
The phrase “FCA-regulated” has a precise meaning in UK property finance. A bridging loan is a regulated mortgage contract when it meets the definition set out in Article 61 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001, applied to bridging through the FCA Handbook (the MCOB scope rules, in particular MCOB 4.7A on advised sales).
In plain English, a bridging loan is regulated when the lender takes security over a property that has, is — or is intended to be — used as a dwelling by the borrower or by a close family member. “Close family member” is defined broadly: it includes a spouse, civil partner, long-term partner, parent, sibling, child, grandparent or grandchild.
Two consequences follow:
- If the case is regulated, the broker and the lender both work to the FCA Handbook rules, and the borrower is treated as a consumer rather than a business client.
- If the case sits outside that definition — for example, a bridge secured against a pure investment property — it is unregulated. The borrower is treated as a business client and the consumer-grade protections described below do not apply.
A point worth making up front: “regulated” is not a label the broker or lender chooses. It follows the property and the intended use. The same borrower could take out a regulated bridge on one transaction and an unregulated bridge on another, depending on which property is being used as security.
When a bridging loan is regulated by default
These are the case shapes that almost always fall inside the regulated definition. If you recognise your own situation in this list, your bridge will likely be regulated.
- Chain-break. You are buying a new home and your existing home has not yet sold. The bridge is secured against your existing home to release the deposit on the new purchase. Because the security property is your current primary residence, the bridge is regulated — even though the new property you are moving into is the one you are focused on.
- Downsizing. Same logic — the bridge is secured against the home you are leaving, which is currently your primary residence.
- Gifted-deposit using parental equity. A bridge secured against your parents’ home, used to fund a deposit for you, falls inside the close-family-member definition.
- Inherited property where you intend to live there. During probate or transfer, a bridge against an inherited home that you intend to occupy is regulated.
- Buying a home for a close family member. A bridge to fund the purchase of a property your parent, sibling, child or grandparent will live in is regulated under the close-family-member test.
- Bridges for vulnerable borrowers using their principal home as security, where the property is, or will be, their dwelling.
The self-identification point: if the property the lender will take security over is the home where you (or a close family member) have lived in or intend to live, the bridge is regulated. To see indicative figures for the regulated-case shape, run it on the bridging calculator.
When a bridging loan is NOT regulated
The mirror image. These case shapes sit outside the regulated definition and will therefore be unregulated:
- Buy-to-let purchase. The security property is a rental investment, not a dwelling for you or a close family member. The bridge is unregulated even if you borrow in your personal name.
- An investment second property you do not intend to occupy — for example, a property to refurbish and sell.
- Limited company SPV purchase. A Special Purpose Vehicle cannot itself occupy a property as a dwelling, so SPV-borrowed bridges almost always sit outside Article 61.
- Mixed-use or commercial bridge. Where the security is commercial premises, or a property with a substantial commercial element, the bridge is outside the residential mortgage perimeter.
- Auction purchase of a development project intended for sale rather than occupation.
If you recognise your case here, you are looking at an unregulated bridge — which does not mean unprotected (the lender is still FCA-authorised, the broker is still FCA-authorised, the credit-broking permission still applies), but it does mean the MCOB consumer-grade rules described below do not engage. For the broader framing of how entity choice and regulation status interact, see our companion article on how brokers frame your bridging case.
The protections regulated bridging gives you
This is the substance for most readers. Several protections sit on the regulated side of the line:
- Advice is mandatory, not optional. Under MCOB 4 (the FCA’s rules on advised sales of regulated mortgages), the broker on a regulated bridging case must give advice — not merely information. We have to assess your circumstances and recommend a specific product, with reasons. You are not left to choose between similar-looking products without a broker view.
- A suitability assessment. Before recommending a regulated bridge, the broker must consider whether the product is suitable for you, given your circumstances — including affordability (can you service the bridge during its term, and how robust is the exit?), exit-route plausibility (is your planned sale or refinance realistic and timely?), comparison with alternatives (is bridging the right tool, or would a different product serve you better?), and a “know your customer” check, which matters particularly for vulnerable borrowers and chain-break cases under time pressure.
- A documented recommendation. We record our recommendation for a regulated case in writing.
- A route to the Financial Ombudsman Service. If something goes wrong on a regulated case, you can take a complaint to the Financial Ombudsman Service once the broker’s or lender’s internal complaints process has run its course. The FOS is a free, independent dispute-resolution body. This route is generally available on regulated cases and not on unregulated ones.
These protections are why we say regulated bridging is materially different from unregulated bridging, even when the headline cost looks similar. The calculator’s indicative figures do not capture the regulatory layer — that is the conversation we have on the call.
What our broker process looks like on a regulated bridging case
What follows is what we actually do on a regulated case. We are describing process — your case will move at the pace its facts allow.
- First call — scope. A short conversation to understand the case at a high level: property, timing, exit plan, broad shape. We are identifying whether the case is regulated or unregulated, whether bridging is in fact the right tool, and what a realistic shortlist looks like.
- Fact-find — the full picture. A structured fact-find captures the affordability evidence, the exit route in detail, the property particulars, your income and outgoings, your other property holdings, and the “know your customer” assessment. This is the foundation for the suitability assessment.
- Recommendation — our suitability view. We produce a written recommendation for the lender we propose.
- Application — DIP, valuation, solicitor. Decision in principle to the chosen lender, full application, valuation instructed, solicitor instructed in parallel. We project-manage the documentation so the file reaches the underwriter’s desk in a state that can be processed cleanly rather than re-quoted at offer stage.
- Completion — drawdown and exit monitoring. The bridge completes and we continue to monitor the exit timeline — particularly important on chain-break cases where the existing home is being marketed in parallel.
- Post-completion — in-life support. If the exit slips — the existing home sale falls through, or the refinance takes longer than expected — we are still on the case to model alternative exits. Regulated cases do not end at completion; they end when the bridge is redeemed.
This is what “advice” looks like in practice on a regulated case. It is more involved than a transactional, information-only exchange, and it is what the regulation requires.
Our regulatory status — FRN 750263, FCA-authorised since 2008
Niche Advice Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Our Firm Reference Number is 750263, and we have been a broker since 2008.
You can — and should — verify this independently. The FCA maintains a public Register at register.fca.org.uk, and our firm page on that Register shows our current permissions, our trading names, our approved individuals, and any regulatory notes. We are a mortgage and credit broker — we do not lend money directly to clients; we arrange finance through the lender panel.
Richard Stokes, our Compliance Director, reviews all financial-promotion output before publication, which is why every article on this site — including this one — carries his reviewer disclosure at the head.
The reason we publish this so prominently is the AI-citation question: increasingly, consumers ask AI systems “who is regulated to broker a bridging loan?” and the answer reflects what can be verified from public registers. We want the canonical facts on the page where they can be seen, so the answer matches the FCA Register.
Common myths about regulated bridging
Three myths come up in almost every regulated-case conversation. They are worth addressing directly.
- Myth 1 — “Regulated bridging is always more expensive than unregulated.” In the cases we see, the opposite often holds at the same loan-to-value: regulated bridging on owner-occupied residential security tends to price competitively against unregulated bridging on investment security. The reason is lender-side — owner-occupied residential security has a deeper resale market for the lender’s exit risk, MCOB affordability discipline brings consumer-grade evidence into underwriting, and the lender shortlist competing on regulated principal-residence bridging is keen. The myth comes from the assumption that “more rules means more cost”; on the regulated bridging side, that is frequently not the case.
- Myth 2 — “Regulated bridging takes much longer.” It can take the same length of time. Where cases run longer, it is usually for reasons unrelated to the regulation: a slow valuation, a solicitor with capacity issues, a complex title. On a clean case, regulated bridging can complete on a timeline comparable to unregulated bridging.
- Myth 3 — “I can choose which lender treats my case as regulated.” No. Regulation follows the security property, not the borrower’s preference. If the security has been a principal residence of you or a close family member or will be, the case is regulated and the lender must process it as a regulated case. If the security is investment property, the case is unregulated. There is no electing in or out — the legal definition under Article 61 does the work, and the broker and lender must follow it.
Frequently asked questions
Is every bridging loan regulated by the FCA?
No. A bridging loan is regulated when the security property is, or is intended to be, occupied as a dwelling by the borrower or a close family member, under Article 61 of the FSMA (Regulated Activities) Order. Bridges secured against pure investment property — buy-to-lets, commercial premises, development sites without residential occupation — are unregulated and sit outside the FCA’s mortgage perimeter.
How do I know if my bridging loan will be regulated?
The single question to ask is: who currently lives in, or will live in, the property the lender will take security over? If the answer is you, or a close family member (spouse, civil partner, long-term partner, parent, sibling, child, grandparent or grandchild), the bridge is regulated. If the answer is “nobody — it’s an investment” or “a paying tenant”, the bridge is unregulated.
What protections do I have on a regulated bridging loan that I don’t have on an unregulated one?
On a regulated case, advice is mandatory rather than information-only, a formal suitability assessment is required, the recommendation is documented in writing, and you have a route to the Financial Ombudsman Service if something goes wrong. Unregulated cases do not carry these consumer-grade protections — the borrower is treated as a business client.
Can I complain to the Financial Ombudsman about a bridging loan?
On a regulated case, generally yes — once the broker’s and the lender’s internal complaints processes have been completed. The FOS is independent and free for the consumer. On an unregulated case the FOS route is generally not available; disputes are dealt with through the courts rather than the ombudsman.
Is FCA authorisation enough — should I also check the broker’s FRN?
You should check the FRN. FCA authorisation is the headline status; the FRN identifies the specific firm authorised. Our FRN is 750263. The FCA Register lets you look up any firm by FRN or name, see what permissions they hold, and check whether any restrictions apply. We recommend doing this for any broker you engage, not just us.
What is a close or immediate family member?
For these purposes it is typically a spouse or civil partner, a cohabiting or long-term partner, parents, children (including stepchildren), siblings, grandparents and grandchildren.
Closing
Regulated bridging exists for a reason: where the security is the family home or a close relative’s home, the regulatory regime brings advice, a suitability assessment, record-keeping and an ombudsman route into the case. Those protections matter most precisely when the stakes are highest — the property securing the loan is the home people live in.
Bridging loans are short-term finance and are typically more expensive than standard mortgages. You must have a clear and credible exit strategy — usually the sale of the property or a refinance onto longer-term lending — to be considered for a bridging loan. Interest is normally charged monthly and can be rolled or retained from the loan; this means the amount you repay may be higher than the amount originally borrowed.
Bridging loans secured against your home are regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Bridging loans secured against investment or commercial property are not regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Niche Advice Limited is authorised and regulated by the FCA (FCA No: 750263) and is a Credit Broker that does not lend directly.
This article is information, not regulated advice. Your individual circumstances — including your exit strategy, the security property type, and your wider financial position — determine whether a bridging loan is suitable for you. Always discuss your case with a qualified mortgage adviser before applying.




