Assisted Living Finance in Wolverhampton
Funding for care homes, supported living and supported housing in Wolverhampton: acquisition finance, commercial mortgages, bridging, development, mezzanine and long-term debt.
Looking for funding on a supported living or care property in Wolverhampton? Wolverhampton sits in West Midlands County, within the West Midlands care and supported housing market. We are a finance arranger, not a lender: we arrange commercial mortgages and the full range of assisted living finance on Wolverhampton assets, from acquisition and bridging through development and mezzanine to long-term debt, across West Midlands County.
Every facility we arrange is grounded in the market evidence. Average care home occupancy across the UK ran at 88.7% (Knight Frank UK Care Homes Trading Performance Review 2025, 2025), with average weekly fees of £1,298/week. We then underwrite the specific Wolverhampton asset, its lease or its trading income and its local demand, on its own merits.
Commercial mortgages and term loans on Wolverhampton care property
A commercial mortgage is the core way to buy or refinance a trading care home or a supported living investment in Wolverhampton. We arrange acquisition finance for existing assets and term debt that holds them for the long run on 5 to 25 year terms. Supported housing let on a long, index-linked lease to a Care Quality Commission registered provider is underwritten on the lease and the provider covenant, typically to around 65 to 75 percent of value. A trading care home is different: there is no single lease, so the lender sizes the loan against the operator's EBITDARM, mature occupancy, fee mix and CQC rating, usually to around 65 to 70 percent of the going-concern value. Established owners can release equity as income grows, and first-time buyers can fund a purchase against the lease or the seller's accounts. We place each facility with the lender that prices Wolverhampton care assets best across West Midlands County.
Supported living, care homes and supported housing across West Midlands County
Each property type is underwritten differently. We arrange finance for specialist supported housing, supported living, residential care homes, nursing homes, extra care and retirement living, exempt accommodation and multi-asset care portfolios in Wolverhampton and across West Midlands County. A block of supported living let to a registered provider on a 25 year lease and a trading nursing home running on local-authority and private fees are credit-assessed in very different ways, and knowing which lender backs each format is the work we do before a deal reaches credit. The structural demand sits behind all of them: the UK population aged 85 and over is projected to reach around 3.0 million by mid-2043 (Office for National Statistics, national population projections, by mid-2043), while care bed supply per head has been falling.
Finance we arrange in Wolverhampton
How much you can borrow against a Wolverhampton care or supported living asset
On a supported living investment in Wolverhampton let to a registered provider, a commercial mortgage usually reaches around 65 to 75 percent of value on the strength of the lease, so you would budget for equity of roughly a quarter to a third of the price. On a trading care home the lender sizes against the going-concern value and the operator's earnings, typically to around 65 to 70 percent. New or repositioned schemes are funded on cost and business plan instead: bridging finance secures a site, an auction purchase or a conversion quickly, and development finance funds a build or change of use to around 65 to 70 percent of cost, with mezzanine topping the stack where the scheme supports it. Interest rates depend on the lender, the lease or covenant strength and the leverage, so we quote them deal by deal rather than as a headline rate. We size the right facility, rate and equity requirement for your Wolverhampton deal.
Where care and supported housing demand sits in Wolverhampton
Wolverhampton, historically part of Staffordshire, installed England's first automatic traffic lights in Princes Square in 1927. Wolverhampton is served by M54 J2, M6 J10 and M6 J11, the kind of road and transport access that matters for staffing a care setting and for families visiting a supported living scheme. Demand draws on neighbourhoods across the town, from Tettenhall, Wednesfield, Bilston and Penn, each generating referrals into local care and supported housing. City of Wolverhampton Council is the local authority that commissions adult social care and supported living placements here, and that determines planning applications for care use, including Class C2 and supported-housing change of use.
Demand signals for supported housing in Wolverhampton
Care and supported housing development is live in the local pipeline: the council planning register shows 4 recent applications for care or supported-housing use in the Wolverhampton area, including 26/00363/FUL (Change of use of the existing care home (Class C2) to a single dwellinghouse (Class C3), including the install...). We track these across council portals through the Construction Capital planning data feed. The demand thesis behind care and supported housing is national and structural: the UK population aged 85 and over is projected to reach around 3.0 million by mid-2043 (Office for National Statistics, national population projections, by mid-2043), care bed provision has fallen to 26.7 beds per 100 people aged 85+ (Nuffield Trust, Care home bed availability, current), and the sector needs an estimated 179,600 to 388,100 units of additional supported housing (National Housing Federation supported housing research, to 2040s). That undersupply is what underpins occupancy and lease demand in Wolverhampton as much as anywhere.
Wolverhampton care and supported housing profile
- Commissioning authorityCity of Wolverhampton Council
- Transport accessM54 J2, M6 J10, M6 J11, A449, A454
Location facts and Land Registry data. Market figures shown are national or West Midlands-level, not Wolverhampton-specific.
Recent care and supported housing planning applications
- 26/00363/FUL · 13 April 2026Change of use of the existing care home (Class C2) to a single dwellinghouse (Class C3), including the installation of n...
- 26/00359/FUL · 11 April 2026Change of use from existing HMO for upto 5 people into C2 carehome for upto 3 children
- 26/00337/FUL · 7 April 2026Change of use of residential dwelling house (C3) into children's care home (C2)
Source: council planning register (Idox). A development-activity signal, not our applications.
The West Midlands care and supported housing market
Wolverhampton is a prime care and supported housing catchment within West Midlands. A dense, ageing population, strong private-pay demand and active local-authority commissioning support both trading care homes and lease-backed supported living, and lenders compete hardest for stabilised assets and strong provider covenants here. Repositioning and development plays are funded on more cautious terms, with the scheme and the operator doing the work.
Birmingham and its conurbation form the central UK care market and the single largest concentration of supported and exempt accommodation in the country.
Birmingham has the largest supported and exempt accommodation market of any city in the country, which makes the West Midlands the proving ground for supported living investment and the focus of the sector's regulation. For investors that depth means a deep pool of registered-provider counterparties, though lease and provider due diligence matters more here than anywhere. Care home demand is underpinned by a large ageing population, and average UK occupancy of 88.7 percent on the Knight Frank review frames the regional opportunity. Lenders active in supported housing know this market well.
Market commentary and figures for West Midlands are drawn from Knight Frank (UK Care Homes Trading Performance Review, 2025); House of Commons Library (Supported exempt accommodation (England), 2024).
Sources and methodology
Care and supported-housing market figures are published nationally or regionally, not per town, so the fees, occupancy and yields on this page are presented as context for a Wolverhampton appraisal and attributed to their sources (Knight Frank UK Care Homes Trading Performance Review 2025; Knight Frank UK Living Sectors Yield Guide, September 2025). Town-level facts are different: transport access, the commissioning local authority are genuinely local and sourced. We do not publish a Wolverhampton-specific fee or yield as if it were measured. Nationally there are around 16,500 care homes offering 465,000 beds (carehome.co.uk Care Home Stats 2025, 2025).
Assisted living finance in Wolverhampton: common questions
Can you get a mortgage on a care home or supported living property in Wolverhampton?
Yes. A care home in Wolverhampton is financed with a commercial mortgage sized on the operator's trading income, and a supported living investment on the lease to a registered provider, rather than a residential loan. We arrange both for investors, landlords and operators, typically to around 65 to 75 percent of value, and place each one with a lender that backs the sector.
How much deposit do I need to buy a supported living or care property in Wolverhampton?
Most lenders advance around 65 to 75 percent on a Wolverhampton supported living asset on a strong registered-provider lease, and around 65 to 70 percent on a trading care home on its going-concern value, so plan for equity of roughly a quarter to a third of the price plus costs. A stabilised asset with a long lease or clean accounts supports the top of the range; a repositioning play is funded on cost and business plan instead.
What are Wolverhampton assisted living finance rates and terms?
Rates depend on the lender, the lease or covenant strength and the leverage, so we quote them deal by deal rather than as a headline. Indicatively, term debt and commercial mortgages start from around 6 to 7 percent, development finance from around 8 percent and bridging from around 0.75 percent per month, with terms from months on a bridge to 25 years on a commercial mortgage. For market context, average UK care fees ran at £1,298/week (Knight Frank UK Care Homes Trading Performance Review 2025, 2025).
Can I fund a conversion to supported housing or a new care scheme in Wolverhampton?
Yes. Conversions to supported housing or exempt accommodation are usually funded with bridging or development finance against the cost of works, then refinanced onto a commercial mortgage once the property is let to a provider or trading. Ground-up care schemes are funded on a development facility to around 65 to 70 percent of cost. The structural shortage of supported housing, an estimated 179,600 to 388,100 units of additional units (National Housing Federation supported housing research, to 2040s), drives demand for both routes, and we arrange them across West Midlands County.
Funding a care or supported living property in Wolverhampton?
Send us the outline and we will come back with a view on fundability and likely terms within one working day.