Yes you can, this will reduce your outstanding bridging finance balance and also reduce your monthly interest charges. You will need to weight up the benefits of paying a lower interest amount on your loan against the opposing cashflow benefits of not doing so.
With the providers we work with, there are no penalties for paying of a bridging facility early provided you meet the minimum term requirement. Most loans are set up typically for 12 months with a minimum loan term of 1 month. This means that if you pay off your loan after 4 months you will only pay for the loan plus interest for 4 months.
With retained interest calculations, a lender will calculate the estimated interest charges for the term of the loan, add this to the loan advance and then retain the funds to service the interest payments every month until the loan is repaid or the term comes to an end.
Rolled interest is when a lender agrees that the repayment of capital and interest can be deferred for a period, usually until the end of the loan term. In this period, you won’t make any repayments at all. Interest will continue to be added to the loan monthly, weekly or possibly daily. In this situation you should make sure you understand the impact of compound interest, namely you will be paying interest on the interest each time a new interest amount is added.
This means that the interest charged on a loan is being repaid monthly rather than being added to the loan. Given the nature of this type of arrangement, lenders will normally want to see evidence that the borrower can afford to make the repayments every month in much the same way as a traditional mortgage.