What does ‘No broker fees’ mean?
Many commercial finance advisers charge a ‘broker fee’ along with a ‘product fee’.
A broker fee is a discretionary charge which some finance brokers try to charge you for their advisory services.
A product fee is the money a lender will pay to the finance broker in return for helping to ‘package’ bridging finance applications before being sent to the lender. If someone goes direct to a lender, the product fee is still charged. So it makes no difference whether a borrower goes direct to a lender or not. The fees and rates will be the same.
We DO NOT charge a broker fee for any bridging finance. Reiterating: we charge £0.00 broker fees for bridging finance.
FAQ
- What’s the difference between a regulated bridging loan and unregulated one?
- What bridging fees are there?
- What is the Bridging Maximizer™
- What is the ‘better than published’ promise?
- What does ‘No broker fees’ mean?
- What is the rate match guarantee?
- Can I get a better deal if I contact lenders directly?
- What is bridging finance?
- What are the pros and cons of bridging finance?
- What does a lender need to know about you, the borrower?
- What is LTV?
- What is first and second charge lending?
- What is light / medium / heavy bridging development finance?