Warehouse Property Finance in Hartlepool
Specialist commercial mortgages and warehouse finance in Hartlepool: purchase and investment, bridging, development, stabilisation and term loans on industrial units.
Warehouse Property Finance arranges commercial mortgages on warehouses across Teesside. Whether you are buying an income-producing industrial unit, refinancing a warehouse onto a commercial mortgage, or funding a ground-up logistics scheme, we model the facility for your Hartlepool deal and place it with the right lender. Hartlepool sits in Teesside, within the North East industrial market.
Every commercial mortgage we arrange is grounded in the regional market. Prime logistics rents in North East run at about £8.00 to £8.50/sq ft (North East, Cushman & Wakefield, Q2 2025) and prime yields at 5.9% (North East, Cushman & Wakefield, Q2 2025). Those are regional benchmarks from the research houses, not a Hartlepool-specific measurement, but they frame the rent, value and debt serviceability a lender works to here. We then underwrite the specific industrial unit, its income and its tenant, on its own merits.
Commercial mortgages for warehouses in Hartlepool
A commercial mortgage is the core way to buy or refinance an income-producing warehouse in Hartlepool. We arrange purchase and investment finance for let industrial units, typically to around 65 to 75 percent loan to value, and term loans that hold the asset for the long run on 5 to 25 year terms. The rent the unit produces drives the loan: a lender sizes the commercial mortgage against the rental income and yield, the tenant covenant and the unexpired lease term. Owner-occupiers buying their own Hartlepool unit can sometimes borrow more against the strength of the trading business, and investors can remortgage to release equity as values and rents grow. We place each commercial mortgage with the lender that prices the asset best across Teesside.
Industrial unit and logistics finance across Teesside
Each warehouse sub-type is a commercial mortgage in its own right, underwritten differently. We arrange finance for big-box distribution warehouses, multi-let industrial estates, urban and last-mile logistics, cold storage, manufacturing and light-industrial units, trade-counter parades and open-storage yards in Hartlepool and across Teesside. A big-box let to a single tenant on a long lease and a multi-let estate with a dozen occupiers are credit-assessed in very different ways, and knowing which lender prices each best is the work we do before a deal reaches credit.
Finance we arrange for Hartlepool units
How much you can borrow against a Hartlepool warehouse
On a let investment warehouse in Hartlepool, a commercial mortgage usually reaches around 65 to 75 percent loan to value, so you would budget for a deposit of roughly a quarter to a third of the price. The figure is driven by the tenant covenant, the unexpired lease term and the building, not the postcode. Owner-occupier purchases can go higher against the trading business. Bridging finance funds an auction or a part-let unit quickly at a lower day-one leverage, and development finance funds a build to around 65 to 75 percent of cost. Interest rates depend on the lender, the loan to value and whether the unit is owner-occupied or held as an investment, so we quote them deal by deal rather than as a headline rate. We size the right facility, rate and deposit for your Hartlepool deal.
Logistics access and industrial estates in Hartlepool
Hartlepool is served by A19, A179 and A689, which underpins occupier demand and the values a lender will support on an industrial unit here. Proximity to Port of Hartlepool adds port-related logistics demand. Liberty Steel's Hartlepool pipe mill manufactures large-diameter steel pipe for energy and infrastructure projects, with the Port of Hartlepool run by PD Ports. Occupiers active in and around Hartlepool include Liberty Steel, PD Ports and EDF Energy, a sign of the covenant strength a lender can underwrite here. Hartlepool falls within or near the Teesside Freeport, which can bring tax and customs advantages for qualifying industrial sites.
Hartlepool logistics geography
- Local authorityHartlepool Borough Council
- Road accessA19, A179, A689
- Key estatesLiberty Steel's Hartlepool pipe mill manufactures large-diameter steel pipe for energy and infrastructure projects, with the Port of Hartlepool run by PD Ports.
- Major occupiersLiberty Steel, PD Ports, EDF Energy
- Freeport / zoneTeesside Freeport
- PortsPort of Hartlepool
Location facts. Market figures shown are North East-level, not Hartlepool-specific.
The North East industrial property market
Hartlepool is an established industrial market within North East, the kind of location lenders are comfortable underwriting. Well-let modern stock attracts competitive commercial-mortgage and term-loan terms, while bridging and development finance suit value-add and ground-up plays where the exit is clear.
Newcastle and Teesside anchor the North East, where the Teesworks freeport and offshore-energy supply chains are reshaping industrial demand.
The North East is the most affordable mainland market for occupiers, with prime rents of 8 to 8.50 pounds per square foot, and availability is tight after a fall in 2025. The Teesworks freeport and offshore-energy supply chains are a structural demand story; for investors the higher 5.9% yield reflects the smaller, more specialised occupier base.
Market commentary and figures for North East are drawn from Cushman & Wakefield (Marketbeat Logistics & Industrial, Q2 2025).
Sources and methodology
The rent, yield, take-up and availability figures on this page are reported by the major property research houses at North East or key-market level, not for Hartlepool individually. We present them as regional context for a Hartlepool appraisal and attribute each figure to its source firm and period (Cushman & Wakefield). Town-level detail above, such as the local authority, road access and named estates, is factual. We do not publish a Hartlepool-specific rent or yield as if it were measured. For national context, total England and Wales industrial floorspace on the rating list is 410.8m sq m at an average rateable value of £42/sq m (VOA, 31 Mar 2025).
Warehouse property finance in Hartlepool: common questions
Can you get a mortgage on a warehouse in Hartlepool?
Yes. A warehouse or industrial unit in Hartlepool is financed with a commercial mortgage rather than a residential one. We arrange them for both investors buying a let unit and owner-occupiers buying premises for their own business, typically to around 65 to 75 percent loan to value, and we place each one with a lender that backs the asset.
How much deposit do I need to buy a warehouse in Hartlepool?
Most commercial mortgages on a Hartlepool warehouse reach around 65 to 75 percent loan to value, so plan for a deposit of roughly 25 to 35 percent of the purchase price. Owner-occupiers can sometimes put down less against the strength of the trading business, and bridging finance can move faster at a lower day-one leverage.
What are Hartlepool warehouse mortgage rates and terms?
Rates depend on the lender, the tenant covenant, the loan to value and whether the unit is an investment or owner-occupied, so we quote them deal by deal rather than as a headline. Terms typically run 5 to 25 years on a commercial mortgage. For market context, prime logistics rents in North East run at about £8.00 to £8.50/sq ft on Cushman & Wakefield, Q2 2025 figures, a regional benchmark rather than a Hartlepool-specific measurement.
Can I refinance or remortgage a warehouse in Hartlepool?
Yes. We arrange remortgages and refinances of Hartlepool industrial units, whether you are moving off a bridging facility onto a term loan, releasing equity, or simply improving your rate as a lease matures. Development exit and stabilisation finance bridge a newly built or part-let unit through to a long-term commercial mortgage.
Funding a warehouse in Hartlepool?
Send us the outline and we will come back with a view on fundability and likely terms within one working day.