County Durham

Commercial Property Development Finance in Chester le Street

Senior debt, stretch senior, mezzanine, JV equity, stabilisation and development exit finance for commercial schemes in Chester le Street.

Matt Lenzie
Written by Matt Lenzie Founder & Principal Broker · 25 years arranging development finance
5
Live planning schemes
319
Units in the pipeline
£40m
Development pipeline GDV
£125k
Residential median (exit context)

If you are developing commercial property in Chester le Street, the right facility is rarely the cheapest headline rate. It is the one that funds the build to completion, holds through letting and sale, and leaves day-one equity for your next site. We arrange commercial property development finance across Chester le Street and the wider County Durham market, from senior debt through to JV equity.

We underwrite a Chester le Street scheme on its commercial fundamentals, with the local residential market as a gauge of exit liquidity for any residential element. That market is deep and highly liquid, around 6,637 residential sales in the past year at a £125,000 median, which helps test the values for the homes in a mixed-use or conversion scheme.

Development finance structures for Chester le Street schemes

We arrange the whole capital structure for Chester le Street commercial schemes. Senior development finance funds the bulk of the build, typically to 65 to 70 percent of cost and 60 to 65 percent of gross development value. Stretch senior and mezzanine finance lift leverage when the appraisal supports it, reducing the equity you commit. JV equity fills the remaining gap for developers scaling beyond their own balance sheet. For operational schemes that let up or trade after completion, such as student accommodation, care homes, hotels or self-storage, stabilisation finance carries the asset from practical completion through to stabilised income. Once the scheme is stabilised or sold, development exit finance refinances it onto cheaper money while units sell or let, releasing equity for the next site in County Durham.

Commercial development we finance across Chester le Street

Each commercial asset class is underwritten on different tests by different lenders, and we arrange finance for all of them in Chester le Street and across County Durham. That covers student accommodation and offices, warehouses and logistics, care homes and healthcare, retail, hotels and leisure, industrial and mixed-use schemes, and the higher-growth classes of self-storage, data centres and life sciences. Knowing which lender backs which sector here, and at what leverage, is the work we do before a scheme ever reaches a credit committee. Local planning records show 319 units in the Chester le Street development pipeline with an estimated value of £39,875,000, a measure of current development appetite in the area.

What the Chester le Street market means for your appraisal

Chester le Street is a regeneration market within County Durham, where lower current values mean the scheme's end value and the strength of local demand carry the appraisal. These markets reward developers who can evidence demand, and lenders often look for a clear exit or pre-sale before stretching leverage.

Residential market depth as exit context

Residential sold-price depth is one input a development lender uses to gauge exit liquidity, particularly for the residential element of mixed-use, build-to-rent and conversion schemes. Chester le Street recorded around 6,637 residential sales over the past year at a median of £125,000, which makes the local market deep and highly liquid. New-build stock carries a premium of 84% over existing stock here. Commercial values turn on covenant, yield and sector demand, which we assess scheme by scheme.

This residential mix is exit context for the homes within a mixed-use or conversion scheme. It is not a guide to commercial values, which are sector and covenant driven.

Residential sold price by type (Chester le Street)

Detached£255,000
Semi-detached£140,000
Terraced£85,000
Flat / apartment£80,000

Source: HM Land Registry residential price-paid data, last 12 months.

Recent price trend

QuarterMedianSales
2024-Q2£115k2562
2024-Q3£118k2650
2024-Q4£125k2977
2025-Q1£135k2906
2025-Q2£115k2318
2025-Q3£121k2217
2025-Q4£130k1972
2026-Q1£120k1176
Pipeline

Live development pipeline across County Durham

Relevant planning activity recorded by Durham County Council, a read on competing supply and local development appetite.

  • Grange Farm Sunniside Bishop Auckland DL13 4LZ

    DL13 4LZ Pending Consideration

    General purpose agricultural building

    View on the planning portal
  • Littletown Farm Littletown Durham DH6 1AJ

    DH6 1AJ Pending Consideration

    Prior notification under Part 3 Class R for the change of use of an agricultural building to a flexible use.

    View on the planning portal
  • Land North West Of 20 26 Duchy Close Consett DH8 5YT

    DH8 5YT71 units£8.9m GDV Pending Consideration

    Erection of 71 dwellings with associated access, landscaping, open space and engineering works

    View on the planning portal
  • Land To The West Of Castlefields Bournmoor DH4 6HH

    DH4 6HH200 units£25m GDV Pending Consideration

    Outline planning application comprising the erection of up to 200 dwellings, with drainage, access, open space, landscaping and associated infrastructure, with all matters reserved except for access.

    View on the planning portal
  • Land To The West Of The Junction Of A689 And Stockton Road Sedgefield TS21 2AG

    TS21 2AG48 units£6m GDV Pending Consideration

    Hybrid planning application comprising Full planning permission for the erection of 48 dwellings, vehicular access, landscaping and associated infrastructure; and Outline planning permission with all matters reserved for the erection of 2 dwellings, landscapin…

    View on the planning portal
Evidence

Recent residential sales in Chester le Street postcodes

A sample of recent residential transactions across DH6, DH7, SR7, DH8, SR8, exit context for the residential element of a scheme rather than a guide to commercial values.

AddressPostcodeTypePriceDate
20, BRUCE GLAZIER TERRACE DH6 2PJ Terraced £73,587 27 March 2026
11, BROCKWELL COURT DH7 8QX Terraced £121,500 27 March 2026
4, STRANGFORD ROAD SR7 8QE Semi-detached £60,000 27 March 2026
4, DOUAI DRIVE DH8 7DN Semi-detached £182,000 27 March 2026
19, THORNTREE GILL SR8 4SP Terraced £160,000 27 March 2026
9, BYRON LODGE ESTATE SR7 0JY Terraced £135,000 26 March 2026
53, NORTH ROAD WEST TS28 5AP Terraced £50,000 26 March 2026
17, GLENHOLME TERRACE TS27 4HU Terraced £70,000 26 March 2026
52, CHURCH SQUARE DH7 8EE Terraced £128,000 25 March 2026
5, LOWES RISE DH1 4NS Detached £470,000 25 March 2026
FAQ

Commercial property development finance in Chester le Street: common questions

How much commercial property development finance can I raise in Chester le Street?

Most senior lenders fund up to 65 to 70 percent of total cost, capped at 60 to 65 percent of gross development value, with stretch senior or mezzanine lifting that toward 85 to 90 percent of cost on a strong scheme. The Chester le Street exit market, currently deep and highly liquid, informs the gross development value a lender will accept.

Which lenders provide development finance in Chester le Street?

We hold more than one hundred lender relationships across banks, challenger banks, debt funds and private capital. The right lender for a Chester le Street scheme depends on the sector, the leverage you need and your track record, and we shortlist the desks most likely to back it across County Durham.

How does the Chester le Street residential market affect a commercial scheme?

It matters mainly as exit context for the residential element of mixed-use, build-to-rent and conversion schemes. HM Land Registry records a £125,000 residential median in Chester le Street over the past year across roughly 6,637 sales, with flats around £80,000. Commercial values, by contrast, turn on covenant, yield and sector demand, which we assess scheme by scheme.

Do you fund commercial development beyond Chester le Street?

Yes. We arrange commercial property development finance across the whole of County Durham and the wider UK, with the same approach: model the capital stack, match the scheme to the lenders that back its sector, and negotiate terms on the developer's behalf.

Funding a scheme in Chester le Street?

Send us the outline and we will come back with a view on fundability and likely terms within one working day.