Bridge loans get their name for a reason: they bridge the gap between where you are now and where you need to be. For real estate investors, that gap is usually about timing — you’ve found the deal, but the conventional financing isn’t ready, the seller won’t wait, or the property doesn’t qualify for a long-term loan in its current condition.
Here are five scenarios where a bridge loan is exactly the right tool.
1. Time-Sensitive Acquisitions
You’ve found a great off-market deal. The seller wants a 7-day close. There’s no way a conventional lender can move that fast. A bridge loan from an asset-based lender can close in 5–14 business days — letting you lock in the property and then refinance into permanent financing on your own timeline.
2. Buying Before Selling
You’ve found your next investment, but your equity is tied up in a property you haven’t sold yet. A bridge loan secured against the existing property (or cross-collateralized against both) gives you the cash to close on the new deal without waiting for the sale to fund.
3. Distressed or Non-Stabilized Properties
Properties that need significant work, have low occupancy, or have credit issues often don’t qualify for long-term financing in their current state. A bridge loan can fund the acquisition and the repositioning. Once the property is stabilized (occupancy up, rents at market, repairs done), you refinance into a permanent loan at better terms.
4. Auction and Foreclosure Purchases
Buying at a courthouse auction or from a power-of-sale lender almost always requires fast cash. A bridge lender who understands the auction process can pre-approve you so you can bid with confidence, knowing the funds will be there when you win.
5. Construction Completion Gaps
Sometimes a construction project runs over schedule or budget, and the original construction lender won’t extend. A bridge loan can pay off the existing construction loan and give you the runway to complete the work and either sell or refinance.
What Bridge Loans Cost
Bridge loans are short-term and asset-based, so they typically carry higher interest rates than conventional financing — usually in the 9–13% range, with origination fees of 1–3 points. The trade-off is speed and flexibility. When you’re closing on a property that will earn you six figures in profit, a few extra months of bridge interest is a small price to pay.
How to Use Bridge Loans Strategically
The key with bridge financing is having a clear, realistic exit strategy from day one. Before you sign, you should know:
- How you’re going to pay off the bridge loan (sale, refinance, or stabilization)
- How long the exit will realistically take
- What your plan is if the exit takes longer than expected
Used correctly, a bridge loan turns a deal you would have lost into a deal you closed. Learn more about our Bridge Loan program or apply now for a custom quote.
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