West Yorkshire

Industrial and Logistics Property Finance in Wakefield

Funding for industrial units, warehouses and multi-let estates in Wakefield: commercial mortgages, acquisition finance, bridging, development, mezzanine and long-term debt.

Matt Lenzie
Written by Matt Lenzie Founder & Principal Broker · 25 years arranging commercial property finance
£9.50/sq ft
Prime rent (Yorkshire)
5.5%
Prime yield (Yorkshire)
7.08%
UK logistics vacancy
1,459
House sales, 12m (Wakefield)

Looking for funding on an industrial unit in Wakefield? Wakefield sits in West Yorkshire, within the Yorkshire and the Humber industrial and logistics market. We are a finance arranger, not a lender: we arrange commercial mortgages and the full range of light industrial finance on Wakefield property, from acquisition and bridging through development and mezzanine to long-term debt, across West Yorkshire.

Every facility we arrange is grounded in the market evidence. Prime industrial and logistics rents in Yorkshire and the Humber run to £9.50/sq ft (CBRE, UK Logistics Q4 2025, Q4 2025), with prime equivalent yields around 5.5% (CBRE, UK Logistics Q4 2025, Q4 2025). Prime rents in the region grew 3.9% over the year (Knight Frank, UK Logistics Market Dashboard, 12 months to Dec 2025). We then underwrite the specific Wakefield property, its income and its occupier demand, on its own merits.

Commercial mortgages on Wakefield industrial units

A commercial mortgage is the core way to buy or refinance an industrial unit in Wakefield. For investors, lenders size the loan against the rent: typically up to around 65 to 70 percent loan to value, tested so the net rental income covers the interest with a clear margin, with the tenancy schedule, the estimated rental value and the re-letting depth of the Wakefield market all part of the assessment. For owner-occupiers buying their own premises the loan is underwritten on the trading business instead, its accounts and its debt service cover, and can reach around 70 to 80 percent for established firms. Terms run from 5 to 25 years. We place each facility with the lender that prices Wakefield industrial property best across West Yorkshire.

Warehouses, multi-let estates and trade counters across West Yorkshire

Each property type is underwritten differently. We arrange finance for distribution and logistics warehouses, multi-let industrial estates, trade counters, workshops and light industrial units, hybrid and flex space, urban and last-mile logistics and open storage yards in Wakefield and across West Yorkshire. A let distribution warehouse on a long lease to a single covenant, a fully let estate of small units with dozens of SME tenancies, and a vacant workshop bought at auction are credit-assessed in very different ways, and knowing which lender backs each format is the work we do before a deal reaches credit. Multi-let estates carry short leases that re-gear to market quickly, which lenders read as reversionary income, while distribution sheds and trade counters lean on the covenant strength and unexpired term of the tenant.

How much you can borrow against Wakefield industrial property

On an industrial investment in Wakefield, a commercial mortgage usually reaches around 65 to 70 percent of value, so you would budget for equity of roughly a third of the price plus stamp duty and costs. The figure is driven by the quality of the income, the tenants, the unexpired lease terms and the condition of the unit, not the postcode. Vacant or part-let property is funded differently: bridging finance secures an auction purchase or a unit awaiting letting, typically to around 70 to 75 percent of value from around 0.75 percent per month, and development or refurbishment finance funds works to around 65 to 75 percent of cost, with mezzanine stretching the stack where the scheme supports it. Interest rates depend on the lender, the leverage and the income profile, so we quote them deal by deal rather than as a headline rate. We size the right facility, rate and equity requirement for your Wakefield deal.

Where industrial property trades in Wakefield

Wakefield Cathedral's 247-foot spire is the tallest in Yorkshire, and the city styles itself the capital of the Rhubarb Triangle, the small district famed for growing early forced rhubarb. Wakefield, known to many as the Merrie City, is served by M1 J39, M1 J41 and M62 J29, the kind of road access that drives occupier demand for industrial units and supports the rents an estate can sustain. Occupiers here draw staff and customers from across the town, from Sandal, Lupset, Agbrigg and Alverthorpe, the catchment a lender weighs when it considers re-letting risk. Planning applications for industrial use, including change of use within Class B2, B8 and E(g), are determined by Wakefield Metropolitan District Council. Multi-let landlords with estates in or around Wakefield include Towngate PLC, Indurent and Flexspace, a sign of institutional confidence in the catchment. Towngate's Flanshaw Industrial Estate and Indurent's Wakefield 41 Industrial Estate, plus a Flexspace centre.

Industrial demand signals in Wakefield

As a local-economy signal, Wakefield recorded 1,459 residential transactions in the last twelve months on HM Land Registry price paid data, at a median price of £220,000; that is housing-market context, not industrial volume, but it speaks to the depth of the local economy that fills small units. Nationally, industrial and logistics vacancy remains moderate at 7.08% (CBRE, UK Logistics Q4 2025, Q4 2025), against forecast rental growth of 2.7% (Savills, Big Shed Prospects 2026, 2026 forecast).

Wakefield industrial market profile

  • Planning authorityWakefield Metropolitan District Council
  • Road accessM1 J39, M1 J41, M62 J29, A1(M), A638
  • Landlords presentTowngate PLC, Indurent, Flexspace
  • House sales (12m)1,459 · median £220,000

Location facts and Land Registry data. Market figures shown are national or Yorkshire and the Humber-level, not Wakefield-specific.

The Yorkshire and the Humber industrial and logistics market

Wakefield is a prime industrial catchment within Yorkshire and the Humber. Dense occupier demand, constrained land supply and competition from last-mile and trade users support strong rents on well-let estates, and lenders compete hardest for stabilised multi-let income here. Vacant or secondary units are funded on more cautious terms, with the business plan and the borrower doing the work.

Yorkshire and the Humber led every UK region on mid-box rental growth in 2025, with the M62 corridor the spine and the Humber ports adding port-logistics and energy-sector demand.

Strong occupier demand against constrained Grade A supply kept vacancy near 5.3% at the end of 2025, with the M62 and Humber ports underpinning a resilient outlook.

Market commentary and figures for Yorkshire and the Humber are drawn from CBRE (UK Logistics Q4 2025, Feb 2026); Knight Frank (UK Logistics Market Dashboard, Jan 2026); Colliers (Industrial and Logistics Rents Maps H2 2025, Jun 2025).

Sources and methodology

Industrial and logistics market figures are published nationally or regionally, not per town, so the rents, vacancy and yields on this page are presented as context for a Wakefield appraisal and attributed to their sources (CBRE, UK Logistics Q4 2025). Town-level facts are different: road access, the named estates, the planning authority, the landlords present, and the Land Registry housing-transaction data are genuinely local and sourced. We do not publish a Wakefield-specific rent or yield as if it were measured. Nationally, UK big-box logistics take-up reached 25.6m sq ft in 2025 (CBRE, UK Logistics Q4 2025, 2025).

FAQ

Industrial and logistics finance in Wakefield: common questions

Can you get a mortgage on an industrial unit in Wakefield?

Yes. An industrial unit in Wakefield is financed with a commercial mortgage rather than a residential loan. We arrange them for owner-occupiers buying their own premises, underwritten on the trading business, and for investors buying let units or estates, underwritten on the rent, typically to around 65 to 70 percent loan to value, and we place each one with a lender that backs the sector.

How much deposit do I need to buy an industrial unit in Wakefield?

Most lenders advance around 65 to 70 percent of value on a let Wakefield industrial investment, so plan for equity of roughly 30 to 35 percent of the price plus costs. Established owner-occupiers can often reach around 70 to 80 percent against their own premises. A vacant or short-income unit is funded on more cautious terms, often via a bridge first.

What are Wakefield industrial finance rates and terms?

Rates depend on the lender, the leverage and the income profile of the property, so we quote them deal by deal rather than as a headline. Indicatively, term debt starts from around 6 percent, development finance from around 8 percent and bridging from around 0.75 percent per month, with terms from months on a bridge to 25 years on a commercial mortgage. For market context, prime industrial and logistics rents in Yorkshire and the Humber run to £9.50/sq ft (CBRE, UK Logistics Q4 2025, Q4 2025).

Can I fund a multi-let estate or a yard in Wakefield?

Yes. Multi-let industrial estates are funded on the rent roll, with the lender testing interest cover against the net income and the manager's ability to run dozens of small tenancies; open storage and industrial yards are funded against the land with more conservative leverage, typically around 55 to 65 percent. We arrange both routes across West Yorkshire.

Funding an industrial unit in Wakefield?

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