Commercial Mortgages Portsmouth
Nursery & school

Day Nursery and School Mortgages Portsmouth

Trading-business commercial mortgages for day nurseries, pre-schools and small independent schools across Portsmouth. Ofsted rating drives lender appetite; registered capacity, occupancy and fee mix feed the underwrite. Active across Drayton, Farlington, Cosham and North End where the suburban catchments support fee-paying day-care demand. LTVs 60 to 70%, mid-2026 rates 7.5 to 9.0% pa.

LTV

60 to 70%

Cover test

EBITDA 1.5 to 2.0x

Rate range

7.5 to 9.0% pa

Facility

£500K to £5M

Underwriting a Portsmouth nursery commercial mortgage

Day nurseries are a stable, well-regulated trading-business asset class, and one where lender comfort has grown materially since the early-2020s sector consolidation. Underwriting tests four variables. Ofsted rating (Outstanding, Good, Requires Improvement, Inadequate) drives appetite at the threshold; most lenders need Good or Outstanding for standard terms. Registered capacity against current occupancy gives lenders comfort on revenue stability. Fee mix, private fees versus Free Early Years Education (FEEE) funded places, determines margin profile. Operator track record in the sector matters more here than in many other trading classes because nursery turnaround is slow.

Outstanding nurseries fund at the keenest end, 65 to 70% LTV, 7.0 to 7.75% pa. Good sits at standard pricing, 60 to 70% LTV, 7.75 to 8.75% pa. Requires Improvement can still fund but at 50 to 60% LTV, 8.75 to 9.0% pa, with a credible Ofsted remediation plan and typically a 12-month trading history showing improvement trajectory. Inadequate is generally unfundable on mainstream desks until the rating recovers, typically a six-to-twelve-month process under the Ofsted re-inspection cycle.

Active Portsmouth nursery clusters: Drayton (PO6) the affluent suburban catchment along the A2030 corridor where dual-income professional households support fee-paying day-care demand. Farlington (PO6) adjacent to Drayton with similar catchment characteristics and a heavy care-home and nursery suburban concentration. Cosham (PO6) serving the wider PO6 catchment plus Queen Alexandra Hospital staff households. North End (PO2) the inner-suburban dense terraced catchment, smaller-scale nurseries serving working family demand. Multi-site operators consolidating their portfolio into a single facility route through portfolio refinance with a sector-specialist lender on the desk. Worked example: a 55-place Drayton day nursery, Ofsted Good, £1.75M valuation, 91% occupancy, EBITDA £208K. Shawbrook placed at 65% LTV, 7.85% pa on a 5-year fix, 25-year term. Worked example two: a Cosham and Farlington two-site nursery group, £2.15M aggregate valuation, EBITDA £278K aggregate. Routed via portfolio refinance with Cambridge & Counties at 60% LTV, 8.55% pa.

Independent schools are a smaller, more specialist niche in Portsmouth, served by Portsmouth Grammar School, Portsmouth High School and a small preparatory school footprint. Lender pool narrower; underwriting includes pupil roll trend, fee structure (annual fees, charitable status implications) and ISI inspection grade. Pricing wider than nursery, typically 6.5 to 8.5% pa. Cambridge & Counties, Reliance Bank and Hampshire Trust Bank are the realistic desks for £1M to £5M independent school freehold deals.

Nursery and school assets we fund

Single-site day nursery

Owner-operator nursery freehold purchase or refinance. Most common deal type, Drayton, Farlington, Cosham and North End catchments.

Multi-site nursery group

2 to 10 sites consolidated into a single portfolio facility. Aggregated EBITDA cover, blanket-charge structure common.

Pre-school and playgroup

Smaller-cap registered pre-school premises; often community-anchored, charitable structures common.

Independent primary or prep school

Specialist underwriting; pupil roll trend and ISI inspection grade material. Cambridge & Counties, Reliance Bank, Hampshire Trust Bank most active.

Special educational needs (SEN) provision

Specialist SEN settings; lender pool narrower but appetite present where local-authority contracts underpin revenue.

Forest school and outdoor nursery

Niche subset; specialist desks engage where the operator has a Good Ofsted and 18+ months trading.

Finance structures for Portsmouth nursery and school

Trading-business mortgage is the primary route. Multi-site groups route through portfolio refinance with a sector-specialist desk. Larger independent schools may route through structured commercial debt where the facility size justifies it.

Trading-business mortgage

Single-site owner-operator nursery or school, EBITDA, Ofsted and capacity underwritten.

Portfolio refinance

Multi-site nursery groups, aggregated facility across 2+ sites with blanket-charge structure.

Owner-occupier commercial mortgage

Where the trading is mature and the lender treats the case as standard owner-occupier on EBITDA cover, Ofsted Good or better, 3+ years trading.

Commercial remortgage

End-of-fix or capital raise for refurbishment, capacity expansion or onward acquisition.

The Portsmouth nursery and school market

Portsmouth carries a dual-income professional catchment built on the Royal Navy and BAE Systems Maritime Services, Portsmouth City Council, Queen Alexandra Hospital and Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust, the University of Portsmouth and the multi-tenant occupier base at Lakeside North Harbour. This drives sustained demand for fee-paying day-care across Drayton (PO6) where the affluent A2030-corridor suburb concentrates the highest-fee catchment, Farlington (PO6) adjacent with similar catchment characteristics, Cosham (PO6) serving the wider PO6 catchment and Queen Alexandra Hospital staff households, and North End (PO2) anchoring the inner-suburban dense terraced family catchment. Independent schools cluster around Portsmouth Grammar School (Old Portsmouth) and Portsmouth High School (Southsea), with a small preparatory school footprint distributed across the city. Outer Portsmouth suburbs and the wider Hampshire fringe hold pre-school and playgroup premises that fund routinely through trading-business mortgage. The two-university footprint feeds nursery demand from staff households as well, particularly in the PO6 corridor where many University of Portsmouth and Queen Alexandra Hospital staff live.

Lender appetite for Portsmouth nursery and school

Aldermore, <strong>Shawbrook</strong>, Cambridge & Counties and Allica Bank all have meaningful nursery appetite. Mid-2026 pricing 7.5 to 8.75% pa at 60 to 70% LTV. Hampshire Trust Bank (locally HQ'd in Hampshire, strong on Portsmouth) covers larger multi-site groups (5+ sites, £3M+ aggregate facility). SEN provision narrower, Shawbrook and specialist desks. Independent school pool narrower still, typically Cambridge & Counties, Reliance Bank and Hampshire Trust Bank at 6.5 to 8.5% pa. High-street commercial desks (NatWest, Lloyds, Barclays) rarely engage with single-site owner-operator nursery; they will look at let nursery investment where a multi-site operator takes a long FRI lease on the building.

Nursery & School FAQs

Good or Outstanding for standard terms (60 to 70% LTV, 7.5 to 8.75% pa). Requires Improvement can fund at 50 to 60% LTV and 8.75 to 9.0% pa with a clear written remediation plan and typically a 12-month trading history showing improvement. Inadequate is generally unfundable on mainstream desks until the rating recovers, usually six to twelve months under the Ofsted re-inspection cycle.
Yes, typically through portfolio refinance. Aggregated ICR and EBITDA cover across the sites; blanket-charge or aggregated facility structure. Specialist desks like Cambridge & Counties, Aldermore and Hampshire Trust Bank are most active. We have placed 2-site, 4-site and 7-site nursery group facilities through this route across the South Coast.
Mature nurseries trade at 80%+ occupancy on registered capacity; lenders look for sustained occupancy at this level over the last 12 to 24 months. Underutilised nurseries (sub-65% occupancy) need a credible plan, capacity reduction, fee rebalancing or operator change, to fund. New nurseries with no trading record route through bridge-to-let plus term-out, with the term-out conditional on hitting agreed occupancy milestones.
Yes, narrower and more specialist. Pupil roll trend over 3 to 5 years, ISI inspection grade, fee structure and charitable status are all material. Cambridge & Counties, Reliance Bank and Hampshire Trust Bank are the most active desks. Mid-2026 pricing 6.5 to 8.5% pa at 60 to 65% LTV. Larger independents (£5M+ facility) may route through structured commercial debt outside the broker panel.
Free Early Years Education (FEEE / 30-hours funded) is treated as government-backed revenue, strong covenant equivalent, but at a margin profile materially below private fees. Lenders read the fee mix carefully. Nurseries with 60%+ private fees price at the keener end; FEEE-dominant nurseries (75%+ funded) sit wider because the margin is structurally compressed and capacity to absorb cost increases is tighter. Drayton and Farlington nurseries typically run with stronger private-fee weighting than the city average.

Developing a nursery & school scheme in Portsmouth?

Free-of-charge scheme assessment. Indicative terms within 48 hours.