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Bridging Finance

Bridging Home Loans — Buy Your Next Home Before You Sell

Mortgagefy Broker Team · Published · Last reviewed

Bridging finance lets you buy your next Sydney home before you sell your current one. The lender funds both properties for 6-12 months until your old home sells and the loan rolls back to a single mortgage. Useful when timing the market or renovating before a move.

Who this guide is for

The real challenge

Selling your current home before buying the next one means you might miss the property you want — or have to settle for a rental in between. Buying first means you're carrying two mortgages until the old home sells, which most lenders won't fund without bridging structure.

The cost and structure of bridging varies dramatically. Some lenders capitalise interest into the loan; some require full repayment from settlement; some have strict 6-month limits and others go to 12+ months. Choosing the wrong structure can become very expensive.

How Mortgagefy helps

Mortgagefy works with lenders that actively support bridging finance. We model the full picture: total debt during the bridge, capitalised vs paid interest, expected sale price of your old home, and the rollback to a single mortgage at the end.

We help you set realistic expectations on sale price and timing — most bridging trouble comes from over-estimating the old home's price. We work with your real estate agent on this.

How it works — 4 simple steps

1

Position review

Current home value, debt, equity, target purchase price and your sale timeline.

2

Bridge structure

We compare lenders that capitalise interest vs require payment, and the maximum bridge period.

3

Settlement on new home

Both properties on the loan — new home settles, you move in, old home goes to market.

4

Sale + rollback

When your old home sells, proceeds pay down the bridge and the loan rolls back to a single mortgage.

Frequently asked questions

How does bridging finance work?

The lender funds both your current and next property for 6-12 months. Once your current property sells, the proceeds pay down the bridge and the loan rolls back to a single mortgage on your new home.

How long can I be on a bridging loan?

Most lenders allow 6-12 months. Some go to 18 months. The shorter the bridge, the cheaper — long bridges accumulate significant interest on the combined debt.

Do I need to make repayments during the bridge?

Some bridging products capitalise interest (added to the balance), some require full repayment of both loans. Capitalised is more cash-flow-friendly but adds to total debt.

What if my old home doesn't sell in 6 months?

Most lenders allow extension by 3-6 months at additional cost. Worst case the lender forces a sale at market price. Setting a realistic price upfront avoids this scenario.

Will I pay LMI on a bridging loan?

Only if your peak debt (during the bridge) exceeds 80% of the combined property value. We model this upfront and structure to avoid LMI where possible.

Get a free bridging home loan assessment

We model the full bridge — costs, timeline, sale expectation — before you commit to buying the next home.

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