HMO mortgages & finance
Houses in multiple occupation can produce some of the strongest yields in residential property — but they are a specialist lend, and licensing and planning sit upstream of the finance. This is the hub: understand the rules first, then we shop the whole market for the borrowing.
An HMO is a property let to three or more tenants who form two or more households and share a kitchen or bathroom. Run well, the room-by-room income can comfortably outpace a single let on the same building — which is exactly why lenders treat HMOs as a category of their own.
Why HMO finance is its own discipline
HMO mortgages are specialist buy-to-let products. Lenders assess them on the number of lettable rooms and on either a bricks-and-mortar valuation or an investment (income) valuation, and they price higher than a standard buy-to-let to reflect the extra management and regulation. The lender you can use is shaped by the property’s licence, its use class, and whether the area sits under an Article 4 direction — so the finance question can rarely be answered without first settling the regulatory one.
Licensing and planning sit upstream of finance
Before a lender will commit, three regulatory questions usually need an answer. Does the HMO need a licence — and which kind? Is the property the right use class, or does converting it need planning permission? And do the rooms meet the minimum size standards? Get these wrong and the deal can stall after you have spent on it, so it pays to settle them before you offer.
The three things to confirm before you borrow
- Licensing — a mandatory licence is required for any HMO with 5+ occupants in 2+ households (the old three-storey rule was removed in October 2018). A council may also run additional licensing for smaller 3–4-person HMOs, or selective licensing covering all private rented homes in a designated area.
- Planning & use class — C3 is a dwellinghouse, C4 a small HMO (3–6 unrelated tenants), and a large HMO (7+) is sui generis. A C3-to-C4 change is usually permitted development, unless an Article 4 direction applies — then it needs full planning permission.
- Room sizes (England) — minimums of 6.51 sqm for one person over 10, 10.22 sqm for two, and 4.64 sqm for a child under 10. Undersized rooms can’t lawfully be let and won’t count toward the valuation.
How a lender sizes an HMO loan
Two HMOs at the same price can borrow very differently. A lender looks at the room count and rental income, the licence status, the standard of conversion, your experience as a landlord, and whether they value on bricks-and-mortar or on the investment income the building throws off. A well-run, fully licensed, professionally converted HMO opens the door to keener rates and higher loan-to-values; a marginal one narrows the lender panel fast. Our job is to match the property to the lenders who price that profile best.
This is general information, not legal or planning advice — confirm the position with your local council or a solicitor. Licensing schemes, Article 4 areas and room standards vary by council and change over time, and only your local authority can confirm the definitive rules for a given property.
Start with the rules that govern your deal
HMO mortgages
How HMO mortgages differ from standard buy-to-let, how lenders value on rooms, and what rates and LTVs to expect.
What is an HMO?
The legal definition — 3+ tenants in 2+ households sharing facilities — plus C3, C4 and sui generis use classes.
HMO licensing
Mandatory licensing for 5+ occupants, the fit-and-proper test, and how a 5-year licence affects your lending.
Selective licensing
When a council licenses every private rented home in an area — not just HMOs — and what it means for landlords.
Article 4 directions
Where a C3-to-C4 conversion needs full planning permission because permitted-development rights have been removed.
HMO conversion finance
Funding the works to turn a house into a multi-let — bridging, refurbishment finance and the exit onto an HMO mortgage.
Where Vortex Finance fits
Vortex Finance is a whole-of-market property finance broker. We don’t licence your HMO or grant your planning — you confirm those with your council and solicitor — but once the route is clear we shop 100+ lenders for the sharpest terms on the borrowing.
However your HMO project is structured, the finance has to work:
- HMO mortgages — specialist buy-to-let lending priced on rooms and income.
- Buy-to-let mortgages — for single lets and smaller portfolios alongside your HMOs.
- Bridging loans — to buy fast at auction or secure a property before licensing completes.
- Refurbishment finance — to fund the works that turn a house into a compliant multi-let.
- Development finance — for heavier conversions and ground-up multi-unit schemes.
- Commercial mortgages — for larger, sui generis or mixed-use HMO blocks.
HMO rules are one part of a wider compliance picture — see our landlord compliance guides on the Renters’ Rights Act, MEES and Section 24.
Funding an HMO? Let’s find the right lender.
Confirm your licensing and planning, then come to us for the finance. We’ll match the property to the lenders who price HMOs best — indicative terms within 24 hours, and asking won’t affect your credit score.