A class of graphs is bridge-addable if given a graph 
$G$ in the class, any graph obtained by adding an edge between two connected components of 
$G$ is also in the class. The authors recently proved a conjecture of McDiarmid, Steger, and Welsh stating that if 
${\mathcal{G}}$ is bridge-addable and 
$G_{n}$ is a uniform 
$n$-vertex graph from 
${\mathcal{G}}$, then 
$G_{n}$ is connected with probability at least 
$(1+o_{n}(1))e^{-1/2}$. The constant 
$e^{-1/2}$ is best possible, since it is reached for the class of all forests.
In this paper, we prove a form of uniqueness in this statement: if 
${\mathcal{G}}$ is a bridge-addable class and the random graph 
$G_{n}$ is connected with probability close to 
$e^{-1/2}$, then 
$G_{n}$ is asymptotically close to a uniform 
$n$-vertex random forest in a local sense. For example, if the probability converges to 
$e^{-1/2}$, then 
$G_{n}$ converges in the sense of Benjamini–Schramm to the uniformly infinite random forest 
$F_{\infty }$. This result is reminiscent of so-called “stability results” in extremal graph theory, the difference being that here the stable extremum is not a graph but a graph class.