A bridging loan is short-term funding that covers the gap between where you are now and where you're headed next – your new home, your downsize, or your next build. In many cases, you don't make regular repayments during the bridging period – interest is added to the loan and cleared when your sale or project settlements come through.
Pilbara Finance helps you work out the numbers, choose a lender and structure the bridge so it supports your move or project instead of stressing your cash flow.
A bridging loan is a short-term loan that uses the value (equity) in your current property – and often the new one as well – to give you funds while you're in between.
It's most commonly used when you want to buy a new place before you've sold the old one, or when a project or site needs money now but your cash is tied up in property that hasn't settled yet.
We add up what you need for the new property or project (purchase price, costs, build, finish) and look at what's tied up in your existing property or stock. This shows how big a gap the loan needs to cover and for roughly how long.
The lender uses your property as security and puts a short-term loan in place. That loan covers all or part of the purchase/build until your sale or project settlements come through.
When your current home sells or your project settles, the bridging loan is paid down or paid out from those funds. You're then left with whatever long-term loan or cash position you planned to keep.
In many cases, there are no regular repayments on the bridging portion – interest is added to the balance and cleared at the end. We'll explain exactly how it works with the lender we recommend.
We use bridging for everyday people who just need a clean way to move house without turning life upside-down.
When the right place comes up, you can secure it now and sort the sale of your current home afterwards.
Move the family once – no storage sheds, no Airbnb, no living out of boxes while you wait.
Get into a lower-maintenance home, then take your time to present and sell the old place properly.
Shifting between Perth, the Pilbara or elsewhere in Australia? Bridging can cover the overlap so you're not paying rent or mortgages in two places for months.
Bridging isn't just for family homes. It can also help small developers, owner-builders and tradies keep projects moving.
Use equity in current property or stock to lock in the next block, duplex or small project before someone else grabs it.
Short-term funds to cover materials, trades and completion costs while you're lining up sales or waiting on money to land.
Give yourself time to sell completed houses or units properly instead of discounting them just to clear debt.
We'll always pressure-test the plan – sale prices, timelines and costs – before suggesting bridging on any project.
Our job is to show you the good, the bad and the "if it drags out" scenario so you can decide with eyes open.
We model slower sales, sharper buyer offers and project delays – not just the agent's best-case story.
We don't disappear after approval. We check in around listing, offers and contracts to keep the bridging plan on track.
We'll always tell you if a simpler, lower-risk option is a better fit than a bridging loan.
Common questions from WA families, investors and project clients.
In many cases, no regular repayments are required on the bridging portion. Interest is added to the loan and then paid from the sale or settlements at the end. You may still need to keep paying interest or minimums on your existing loan. We'll explain exactly how it works with the lender we recommend.
Usually short-term only – from a few months up to around 12 months is common. The exact timeframe depends on your situation, the lender and how long you realistically need to complete the move or project.
This depends on the value of your properties, your current debt and the lender's limits. Most lenders cap the total amount (your "peak debt") at a percentage of the combined property values. We'll run the numbers and tell you plainly whether there's enough equity to make it work.
If sales or settlements are delayed, interest keeps adding to the loan and the lender may not extend the term forever. That's why we model slower sales and delays from day one and talk through back-up plans before you proceed.
No. Bridging can also be used by investors, small developers, owner-builders and tradies, as long as there's a clear plan for how and when the loan will be cleared.
Definitely not. If equity is tight, income is stretched or the plan relies on everything going perfectly, bridging might not be a good idea. If that's your situation, we'll say so – and help you look at other options.
Send us your question and we'll tell you, in plain English, whether bridging is likely to work for your situation.
Before you sign anything, it's worth seeing how a bridging loan would actually play out. We'll look at your current position, what you want to buy or build, and your likely sale or settlement outcomes – then give you a clear yes/no on whether bridging is a smart tool for you.
Families, investors, developers – bring your plans and we'll talk them through in plain English.
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