Property Bonds & Loan Notes — A Guide for Investors | Verta Property Group
Investor Education · Q2 2026

A guide to property bonds
& loan notes

An educational overview of fixed-income property investing in the UK — how it works, why it exists, who it's for, and what you need to know about the risks.

The basics

What are property bonds and loan notes?

Property bonds — also known as loan notes — are a form of fixed-income investment that allow private investors to lend money to property developers in return for a fixed rate of interest over an agreed period of time.

In simple terms, investors act as the lender, and the developer is the borrower. The developer uses the funds to acquire land, fund construction, or complete development projects. The investor earns regular income payments (often quarterly or annually) and receives their original capital back at the end of the term.

Unlike shares, property bonds do not give ownership of the development — they are debt instruments. Investor capital is typically supported by legal security arrangements, the precise nature of which depends on the bond's structure.

The developer's perspective

Why developers use property bonds

Developers issue property bonds to raise development finance quickly and efficiently, without relying solely on traditional bank funding. Bank lending — although central to most projects — typically comes with constraints:

  • Long approval processes and strict lending conditions
  • A requirement for substantial developer equity
  • Pre-sales or planning approval needed before funds are released

Private investors — through property bonds — provide flexible, project-specific capital that helps developers purchase land, begin construction, or bridge the funding gap between equity and bank finance. This approach allows developers to move faster, reduce reliance on institutional lenders, and take on more projects simultaneously.

The capital stack

Where it sits in the finance stack

In a typical development project, capital is layered. Each layer carries a different level of risk and a corresponding expected return. Property bonds usually sit between senior debt and developer equity — often described as mezzanine or bridge finance.

Developer Equity First money in — high risk, high reward
Property Bonds / Loan Notes Fill the funding gap — fixed-income, secured lending
Senior Debt Bank finance — covers most construction costs

Because property bonds sit mid-way in the capital stack, they generally pay more than senior bank debt — but with a different risk-return profile compared to developer equity.

They are not bank deposits. Returns are not guaranteed, and capital is at risk if the underlying project fails or the issuer defaults.

The trade-off is straightforward: investors accept more risk than a bank lender would, in exchange for a higher fixed return than a bank would offer them on a deposit.

The investor's perspective

Why investors participate

Investors are drawn to property bonds because they offer features that buy-to-let and traditional savings often do not:

Fixed, predictable income

Interest is paid at agreed intervals — typically quarterly or annually — at a rate fixed in the loan note instrument.

Defined investment term

Short-to-medium-term durations of 1–3 years are common, with a clearly defined exit at maturity.

Security arrangements

Bond structures often include a debenture over the company's assets, share charges, or a personal guarantee from a director.

Hands-off exposure

No management responsibility, no tenants, no maintenance — exposure to the development sector without operational involvement.

No SDLT or transaction costs

Unlike direct property purchase, there is no Stamp Duty Land Tax, no legal fees on acquisition, and no mortgage application.

Independent oversight

Most well-structured issues use an independent security trustee, separate from the issuer, who holds security for investors.

The structure

How a typical bond is structured

Although every issue is different, most UK property bonds share a common architecture. Understanding the moving parts helps investors assess any specific offering on its merits.

01

The Issuer

A company — typically a special-purpose vehicle or the developer itself — that issues the loan notes and is contractually obliged to repay investors.

02

The Instrument

A formal loan note instrument or trust deed setting out the interest rate, payment dates, term length, and conditions of default and repayment.

03

Security Package

May include a debenture or floating charge over the issuer's assets, share charges over group companies, and personal guarantees from directors.

04

Security Trustee

An independent third-party trustee who holds the security on behalf of all bondholders and is empowered to enforce it in the event of default.

Important

Understanding the risks

Property bonds and loan notes are high-risk investments. Any sensible discussion of the category has to spend as much time on the downside as on the upside. Investors should understand each of the following before considering any specific offering.
!

Capital risk

If the issuer is unable to repay, investors may lose some or all of their capital. Security arrangements help recovery but do not guarantee it.

!

Issuer-specific risk

Returns depend on the issuer's continued operational and financial performance, and on the success of the underlying development projects.

!

No FSCS protection

Property bonds are generally not covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme in the same way as bank deposits.

!

Market risk

Wider property market conditions — interest rates, sales velocity, construction costs — can affect a developer's ability to meet obligations.

!

Illiquidity

Bonds are typically not tradeable. Investors should expect to hold for the full term, with no secondary market.

!

Concentration risk

Holding a large portion of net assets in any single bond, or in this asset class generally, is not appropriate. Diversification matters.

Reference

Glossary

A short reference for the language commonly used in loan note documentation.

Coupon
The interest rate paid by the bond, expressed as a percentage per annum.
Debenture
A legal document granting security over a company's assets in favour of bondholders.
Floating charge
A flexible form of security covering changing pools of assets (e.g. stock, receivables) rather than fixed items.
Maturity
The date on which the bond term ends and the issuer must repay the principal in full.
Principal
The original capital amount invested, separate from the interest paid on it.
Security trustee
An independent firm that holds and, if necessary, enforces the security on behalf of investors.
Senior debt
Lending that ranks first for repayment in a default — typically held by a bank.
Mezzanine
Lending that ranks below senior debt but above equity; pays more, carries more risk.
Share charge
A form of security granting bondholders rights over the shares of a company in the issuer's group.
Personal guarantee
A promise by a named individual (often a director) to repay the debt personally if the issuer cannot.
Important

Property bonds are high-risk investments. You may lose all of your capital. Returns are not guaranteed and past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns. The information on this page is general in nature and does not constitute financial, tax or legal advice. You should seek independent advice from a suitably qualified professional before making any investment decision.

Also in our portfolio

Direct property opportunities

Property bonds sit alongside our usual range of direct property investments — for investors who prefer the tangibility of owning bricks-and-mortar.

Visit our Q2 2026 top picks for the full portfolio.

The next step

Ready to view the investment pack?

Full product details — including the issuer, fixed return rates, investment tiers, security arrangements, and the complete due diligence pack — are restricted to investors who meet the FCA's definition of Certified High Net Worth or Self-Certified Sophisticated.

Self-certification takes about two minutes. Valid for 12 months.