Manchester has never been short of people with an eye on property abroad, and lately a lot of that attention has turned toward the United States. Florida condos, Texas rental homes, and Atlanta investment properties keep coming up in conversation among UK buyers looking to diversify beyond the domestic market. What’s less talked about is how most of them are actually paying for it.
According to the National Association of Realtors, international buyers purchased approximately 56 billion US dollars worth of US residential real estate between April 2024 and March 2025, a 33.2 percent increase on the year before. British buyers were among the more active nationalities in that figure. What the headline number doesn’t show is that more than half of foreign buyers paid entirely in cash. Not because it was their preferred strategy, but because getting a US mortgage from the UK has historically been close to impossible through a conventional bank.
Why a UK Buyer Struggles to Get a Standard US Mortgage
The issue isn’t really about wealth or creditworthiness. It’s about paperwork that was never designed with a UK borrower in mind.
Most American mortgage lenders build their entire process around domestic applicants: a Social Security Number, a US credit score, a W-2 job, US tax returns. A UK buyer, even a financially solid one with a strong credit history at home, a good income, and a clear repayment plan, simply doesn’t fit that mould. Their income is in sterling, their credit history sits with UK agencies a US bank has no way of reading, and their tax documents look nothing like what an American underwriter is trained to review.
Faced with that mismatch, a lot of conventional lenders take the easier route and decline the application rather than adapt their process. That’s how a buyer with a six figure income and a spotless credit record in the UK ends up being told no by a US bank, not because they’re a poor risk, but because the underwriting model wasn’t built to see them clearly.
The Loan Types Actually Solving This
This is where specialist lenders such as America Mortgages have carved out a genuinely useful niche, building mortgage products around foreign borrowers from the ground up rather than treating them as an exception to a domestic process.
Two products come up constantly for UK buyers specifically.
The first is Foreign National Mortgage financing, designed for exactly this situation: a borrower earning income abroad, with no US credit file and no Social Security Number, who still wants to buy US property. Rather than asking a UK applicant to somehow produce an American financial history they don’t have, these programmes assess UK income, UK credit standing, and overall financial position directly.
The second is DSCR lending, which qualifies a purchase based on whether the property’s own rental income can cover the mortgage payment, rather than the buyer’s personal income or employment history at all. For a UK investor buying a rental property in Orlando or Phoenix, this often matters more than anything else on the application. The property qualifies itself.
You Don’t Need to Fly to America to Close
One assumption that stops a lot of UK buyers before they even start is the idea that you need to be physically present in the US to complete a property purchase. That used to be closer to true. Notarisation requirements, document execution, and closing procedures often meant multiple trips across the Atlantic just to sign paperwork.
That’s changed substantially. Remote closings, international notarisation, and power of attorney structures now allow most of this process to happen from a laptop in Manchester rather than a solicitor’s office in Miami. Transactions that once required two or three flights can typically be completed within a five to six week window without the buyer leaving the UK.
It Doesn’t Stop at the Purchase
Most people think about financing purely as a purchase problem, but for buyers who already own US property, refinancing is often the more valuable tool. As a property appreciates, the equity sitting inside it can be accessed to fund the next purchase, improve cash flow, or simply free up capital without selling an asset that’s still performing well.
For a UK buyer building a small US property portfolio over several years, being able to refinance an existing property rather than selling one to fund the next is often what separates someone who owns one rental home from someone who owns four.
What This Actually Changes
Leverage is a basic tool in property investing everywhere else. A UK buyer investing domestically wouldn’t think twice about using a mortgage rather than paying cash outright, because it preserves capital for other opportunities and spreads risk across more than one asset. That same logic applies just as well across the Atlantic, it’s simply taken longer for the financing infrastructure to catch up to the demand.
The 56 billion dollar figure making headlines isn’t really the interesting number. The interesting number is that most of that capital moved without any leverage at all. As more UK buyers become aware that mortgage options built specifically for their situation actually exist, the gap between how much capital could flow into US property and how much currently does is likely to close. For a Manchester based buyer weighing up a US investment property, the honest starting point isn’t whether the US market is worth it. It’s whether they know financing for it is actually available to them, because for a long time, it effectively wasn’t.

