π Published: February 23, 2026
Last Updated: February 2026
Can You Get a Commercial Loan with Bad Credit?
Can you get bad credit commercial loans? Yes. While traditional banks typically require a 680+ credit score for commercial loans, alternative lenders β including private bridge lenders, hard money lenders, and asset-based debt funds β regularly fund borrowers with credit scores as low as 500. In other words, the key is shifting from borrower-focused underwriting to asset-focused underwriting, where the property’s value, cash flow, and your exit strategy matter more than your personal credit history. As a result, in 2026, more capital than ever is available for borrowers willing to accept higher rates in exchange for speed and flexibility. Bad credit commercial loans focus on the deal, not your score.
Consequently, this guide breaks down exactly what’s available at each credit tier, what it costs, and how to position yourself for the best terms possible β even with damaged credit.
What Credit Score Do I Need for a Commercial Loan?
There is no single minimum credit score for commercial loans. The score you need depends entirely on the type of lender. Banks want 680+. Private lenders care far less. Here’s a realistic breakdown of what each credit tier qualifies for in 2026:
500β579: Hard Money and Private Capital Only
At this tier, consequently, your options are limited to hard money lenders and private capital sources that underwrite almost exclusively on the asset. Expect interest rates of 12β15%+, loan-to-value (LTV) ratios capped at 60β65%, and terms of 6β24 months. Down payments of 35β40% are standard. Importantly, these loans are bridge instruments β they buy you time, not permanent financing. If the deal’s economics support the carry cost, this tier still works.
580β619: Bridge Lenders and Select Debt Funds
In contrast, a 580+ score opens the door to a wider pool of bridge lenders and small-balance commercial debt funds. Rates typically fall between 10β13%, LTV can reach 70%, and terms extend to 12β36 months. Moreover, some lenders at this tier will consider light-doc programs where the property’s income matters more than yours. Down payments of 25β35% are typical.
620β659: DSCR Loans and Non-QM Programs
Furthermore, this is where the market meaningfully expands. DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio) loans become available β these qualify borrowers based on the property’s rental income covering the mortgage payment, not your personal income. Rates range from 8β11%, LTV can reach 75%, and terms of 5β30 years are available. In particular, a DSCR of 1.20x or higher is the typical threshold. Down payments of 20β30%.
660β679: Near-Conventional with Premium Pricing
Additionally, you’re on the edge of conventional lending. Credit unions, community banks, and CMBS lenders will consider you, though with rate premiums of 0.5β1.5% above their best-tier pricing. Rates of 7β9%, LTV up to 75β80%, and 25-year amortization schedules are realistic. In addition, some SBA programs also become accessible here.
680+: Full Market Access
Finally, at 680 and above, you qualify for conventional bank loans, SBA 7(a) and 504 programs, CMBS conduit loans, and agency debt (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac multifamily). Rates of 6β8%, LTV up to 80β90% (SBA), and terms of 10β25 years. This is the goal for long-term permanent financing β and why the bridge-then-refinance strategy discussed below is so powerful.
What Is Asset-Based vs. Borrower-Based Underwriting?
This is the single most important concept for bad-credit borrowers to understand. In essence, traditional bank underwriting is borrower-based: your credit score, personal income, tax returns, net worth, and debt-to-income ratio drive the approval decision. The property matters, but you are the primary risk the bank evaluates.
Asset-based underwriting flips this. The lender’s primary concern is the property itself β its current value, its income-producing capacity, the local market, and the borrower’s exit strategy (how you’ll repay or refinance). Your credit score may be reviewed, but it’s a secondary factor, not a gating one.
As a result, the practical difference is enormous. A borrower with a 550 credit score who owns a stabilized retail center with a 1.40x DSCR and 60% LTV is a strong candidate for asset-based lenders. The same borrower walks into a bank and gets declined before the conversation starts. If a bank said no to your commercial loan, asset-based lending is almost certainly your next step.
Key Metrics Asset-Based Lenders Use
- Loan-to-Value (LTV): Loan amount Γ· appraised property value. Lower is safer for the lender. Most want β€ 65β75%.
- Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR): Net Operating Income Γ· Annual Debt Service. A DSCR of 1.25x means the property generates 25% more income than needed to cover the loan payment.
- Exit strategy: How will you repay? Refinance into permanent debt? Sell the property? Pay off from business income?
- Property condition and location: The collateral must be marketable if the lender needs to foreclose.
DSCR Formula: DSCR = Net Operating Income (NOI) Γ· Total Annual Debt Service. Example: A property generating $120,000 NOI with $96,000 in annual loan payments has a DSCR of 1.25x.
Can I Get a Commercial Loan After Bankruptcy?
Yes β and the timeline depends on the lender type, not a universal rule. Hard money and bridge lenders can often fund immediately after discharge, sometimes even during an active Chapter 13 plan with court approval. For these lenders, your bankruptcy is context, not a disqualifier.
Specifically, here’s the realistic timeline by lender type:
- Hard money / private bridge lenders: Immediately after discharge (sometimes during active Chapter 13 with court approval)
- Non-QM and DSCR lenders: 1β2 years post-discharge
- Credit unions and community banks: 2β4 years post-discharge
- SBA loans: Typically 3+ years, with demonstrated re-established credit
- CMBS and agency (Fannie/Freddie): 4β7 years post-discharge
What lenders want to see post-bankruptcy: Re-established credit tradelines (even secured credit cards count), no new derogatory marks since discharge, a clear explanation letter, and β most importantly β a deal that makes sense on its own merits. The further you are from the bankruptcy event, the less it matters. Similarly, after 7 years, most lenders treat it as a non-issue.
Chapter 7 vs. Chapter 13: Moreover, Chapter 7 (full liquidation) is generally viewed more favorably because the debt is fully discharged. Chapter 13 (repayment plan) can actually work in your favor if you’ve maintained consistent plan payments β it demonstrates financial discipline despite past difficulties.
Can I Get a Commercial Loan After Foreclosure?
Yes, however, the waiting periods are generally longer than bankruptcy. A foreclosure signals direct real estate risk to lenders, which makes them more cautious β especially when you’re seeking another real estate-secured loan.
Realistic timelines by lender type:
- Hard money / private bridge lenders: Immediately, or within months. The new deal’s LTV and exit strategy are what matter.
- Non-QM and DSCR lenders: 2β3 years post-foreclosure
- Community banks: 3β5 years
- SBA loans: 3β5 years with strong re-established credit
- CMBS and agency debt: 5β7 years
Critical distinction: If the foreclosure was on a different property type than what you’re now purchasing, some lenders view this more favorably. A residential foreclosure followed by a commercial acquisition is a different narrative than serial commercial defaults. Because of this, context matters, and a good loan advisor will help you frame the story correctly.
In addition, if your foreclosure was related to COVID-era disruptions (2020β2022), many lenders in 2026 have explicit carve-outs for pandemic-related credit events. Ask about this specifically.
What Are Hard Money and Bridge Loan Options for Bad Credit?
Hard money loans and bridge loans are the primary tools for bad-credit commercial borrowers. Although the terms are sometimes used interchangeably, there are meaningful differences:
Hard money loans are asset-based loans from private lenders or small lending companies. They’re called “hard money” because the hard asset (the property) is the primary collateral. Credit score minimums are low or nonexistent. Rates: 11β15%. Terms: 6β24 months. LTV: 55β70%. These are the option of last resort β and often the fastest path to closing.
Bridge loans are short-term loans designed to “bridge” the gap between an immediate need and a longer-term solution. Commercial bridge loans typically come from slightly more institutional sources β debt funds, specialty finance companies, and some banks. They may have modest credit requirements (550β600+) but are still primarily asset-based. Rates: 8β12%. Terms: 12β36 months. LTV: up to 75%.
Most importantly, the practical advantage of both is speed. While a bank loan takes 60β120 days, bridge loans can close in as little as 48 hours in urgent situations, and 2β3 weeks is standard. When a deal is time-sensitive β a foreclosure auction, a motivated seller, a 1031 exchange deadline β speed is worth the premium.
Typical hard money / bridge loan structure for a bad-credit borrower:
- Loan amount: $150,000β$25,000,000+
- LTV: 60β70% of as-is value (up to 80% of after-repair value for value-add projects)
- Rate: 9β14% depending on credit, LTV, and property type
- Points: 1β3 origination points (1 point = 1% of loan amount)
- Term: 12β24 months with possible extensions
- Prepayment penalty: Usually none or minimal
- Closing timeline: 7β21 days
Can I Get a No-Doc or Stated Income Commercial Loan?
In short, true “no documentation” commercial loans β where no financial information whatsoever is verified β are extremely rare in 2026. Post-2008 regulations and lender risk management have all but eliminated them. However, several programs come close:
Stated income / bank statement programs: You state your income rather than proving it through tax returns. Some lenders verify using 3β12 months of bank statements instead. These programs are designed for self-employed borrowers and business owners whose tax returns understate their actual earnings due to deductions and depreciation.
DSCR-only programs: The most common “light doc” option. The lender qualifies the loan based solely on the property’s rental income versus the proposed debt service. Your personal income is never verified. A DSCR loan requires the property to generate enough income to cover the payment β typically a 1.20xβ1.25x ratio β and nothing more from you personally.
Asset depletion programs: If you have significant liquid assets but irregular income, some lenders will “deplete” your assets over a hypothetical period to calculate qualifying income. For example, $1,000,000 in liquid assets depleted over 360 months = $2,778/month in qualifying income.
What “no doc” programs still require:
- Property appraisal (always)
- Title search and insurance (always)
- Entity documentation (LLC operating agreement, EIN)
- Proof of insurance
- Personal identification and background check
- Credit report (though the score threshold may be flexible)
Therefore, you can avoid tax return verification, but you cannot avoid property-level due diligence. That’s actually the point β the deal carries the weight, not your personal financial profile.
What Is the Credit Repair + Bridge Loan Strategy?
Without a doubt, this is the most powerful strategy available to bad-credit commercial borrowers in 2026: use a bridge loan to close the deal now, actively repair your credit during the bridge term, then refinance into permanent financing at dramatically better terms.
Here’s how it works in practice:
Month 0: You close a bridge loan at 11% interest, 65% LTV, with a 24-month term. Your credit score is 580. The property is a small multifamily generating $8,500/month in rent.
Months 1β18: While the bridge loan is in place, you execute a credit repair plan: dispute inaccurate items, pay down revolving balances below 30% utilization, add positive tradelines, and ensure every payment is on time. You stabilize the property β fill vacancies, complete deferred maintenance, lock in leases.
Month 18β24: Your credit score has improved to 660+. The property is now stabilized with a provable income history. You refinance into a DSCR loan at 8.5%, 75% LTV, with a 30-year term. Your monthly payment drops. Your cash flow increases. The higher LTV may even return some of your original equity.
The Math Behind the Bridge-Then-Refinance Play
Suppose you acquire a property for $500,000 with a $325,000 bridge loan (65% LTV) at 11% interest-only. Monthly payment: $2,979. After credit repair, you refinance into a $375,000 DSCR loan (75% LTV on the same value) at 8.5% amortized over 30 years. Monthly payment: $2,883 β lower payment, more leverage, and you pull out $50,000 in equity. The 18 months of bridge loan “premium” (roughly $1,700/month more than the permanent rate) costs you about $30,600 total β but you extracted $50,000 in equity at refinance. Net benefit: approximately $19,400, plus you secured the deal when it was available.
Credit repair actions that move the needle fastest:
- Pay revolving balances below 30% utilization (biggest single factor β can add 40β80 points)
- Dispute inaccurate collections and late payments (30β50 point potential)
- Add authorized user tradelines with long history and low utilization (15β30 points)
- Avoid any new hard inquiries during the repair period
- Set every single account to autopay β one missed payment undoes months of progress
Ultimately, this strategy works because you’re not choosing between the deal and your credit β you’re doing both simultaneously. The bridge loan is the tool that makes it possible.
What Rates, Terms, and Down Payments Should I Expect by Credit Tier?
To summarize, here’s a realistic overview of what bad credit commercial loan terms look like across the credit spectrum in 2026. Of course, these are market ranges β your specific deal, property type, and lender will determine exact pricing.
500β579 Credit Score:
- Rates: 12β15%+
- LTV: 55β65%
- Down payment: 35β45%
- Term: 6β18 months
- Lender type: Hard money, private capital
- Origination fees: 2β4 points
580β619 Credit Score:
- Rates: 10β13%
- LTV: 65β70%
- Down payment: 25β35%
- Term: 12β36 months
- Lender type: Bridge lenders, debt funds, select DSCR
- Origination fees: 1.5β3 points
620β659 Credit Score:
- Rates: 8β11%
- LTV: 70β75%
- Down payment: 20β30%
- Term: 5β30 years (DSCR and non-QM)
- Lender type: DSCR lenders, non-QM, some credit unions
- Origination fees: 1β2 points
660β679 Credit Score:
- Rates: 7β9%
- LTV: 75β80%
- Down payment: 20β25%
- Term: 10β25 years
- Lender type: Credit unions, community banks, CMBS, DSCR
- Origination fees: 0.5β1.5 points
680+ Credit Score:
- Rates: 6β8%
- LTV: 75β90% (SBA up to 90%)
- Down payment: 10β25%
- Term: 10β30 years
- Lender type: Banks, SBA, CMBS, agency, life companies
- Origination fees: 0β1 point
Quick cost comparison formula: Total cost of capital = (Loan Amount Γ Interest Rate Γ Term in Years) + (Loan Amount Γ Origination Points). For a $500,000 bridge loan at 12% for 18 months with 2 points: ($500,000 Γ 0.12 Γ 1.5) + ($500,000 Γ 0.02) = $90,000 + $10,000 = $100,000 total cost. Likewise, compare this against the opportunity cost of not doing the deal β that’s usually the more important number.
How Can I Strengthen My Commercial Loan Application Despite Bad Credit?
Even with a low credit score, however, there are concrete steps that make lenders more likely to approve your deal β and at better terms. Think of these as compensating factors that offset the credit risk:
1. Increase your down payment. Nothing de-risks a deal faster than more equity. Moving from 70% LTV to 60% LTV can drop your rate by 1β2% and open doors to lenders who’d otherwise pass. Every dollar of equity is a dollar the lender doesn’t have to worry about.
2. Present a clear, documented exit strategy. Lenders want to know how they get repaid. A vague “I’ll refinance later” is weak. A specific plan β “I will refinance into a DSCR loan at month 18 once my credit score reaches 660+, here’s the credit repair plan and the lender I’ve pre-qualified with” β is strong.
Leverage Partners, Reserves, and Presentation
3. Bring a strong co-guarantor or key principal. If you have a business partner, spouse, or investor with strong credit, their guarantee can significantly improve terms. Some lenders will price the loan based on the strongest guarantor’s credit profile.
4. Show liquid reserves. Furthermore, demonstrate that you have 6β12 months of debt service payments in liquid reserves (cash, not equity). This reassures lenders that temporary cash flow disruptions won’t trigger a default.
5. Provide a professional loan package. Include a clear executive summary of the deal, rent rolls, operating statements, property photos, comparable sales, and your business plan. Borrowers who present like professionals get treated like professionals β even with damaged credit.
6. Explain the credit events. For instance, write a brief, honest letter explaining what caused the credit damage. Medical bills, divorce, COVID-era business disruption, a bad partnership β lenders are human. Context matters. What they don’t want to see is a pattern of financial irresponsibility with no acknowledgment.
7. Use an experienced loan advisor. A knowledgeable commercial loan advisor knows which lenders are most flexible for your specific situation, how to frame your deal, and what compensating factors to emphasize. This isn’t about spinning a story β it’s about matching your deal to the right capital source.
Frequently Asked Questions: Bad Credit Commercial Loans
Can I get a commercial loan with a 500 credit score?
It’s possible, although limited. At a 500 score, your options are primarily hard money lenders and private capital. Expect 35β40% down payment requirements, rates of 12β15%+, and short terms of 6β18 months. The deal must be strong on its own merits β high equity, clear exit strategy, and a property with obvious value. Consider the credit repair + bridge loan strategy to improve your position within 12β18 months and refinance into better terms.
My bank denied my commercial loan β should I try another bank?
You can try, but if the denial was credit-related, most banks operate within similar credit score thresholds (typically 680+). Your time is better spent approaching alternative lenders β bridge lenders, hard money lenders, or debt funds that use asset-based underwriting. These lenders evaluate the deal first and the borrower second. One bank denial does not mean you can’t get funded; it means you’re talking to the wrong type of lender.
How long after bankruptcy can I get a commercial loan?
For bridge and hard money lenders: often immediately after discharge. For conventional bank loans: typically 2β4 years after Chapter 7 discharge, or during Chapter 13 with court approval and consistent plan payments. CMBS and agency loans typically require 4β7 years. The key factors are the time elapsed, the credit you’ve re-established since discharge, and the strength of the deal you’re presenting.
Will applying for multiple commercial loans hurt my credit?
Commercial loan inquiries are treated differently than consumer credit inquiries. Most commercial lenders perform a “soft pull” during initial screening and only conduct a hard inquiry at final underwriting. Multiple soft pulls do not affect your score. Even hard commercial inquiries have minimal impact compared to consumer credit cards or auto loan applications. Don’t let inquiry fear prevent you from exploring your options.
Can I get a no-doc commercial loan in 2026?
True “no documentation” loans are rare. However, “light doc” and “stated income” programs exist where the property’s income is verified but the borrower’s personal income is not. DSCR loans are the most common version β they qualify based on the property’s cash flow, not yours. These typically require higher down payments (25β35%) and come at slightly premium rates, but they’re a legitimate path for self-employed borrowers and those with complex tax situations.
Is it better to fix my credit first or get the deal now?
Essentially, this depends entirely on the deal economics and timing. If the deal is time-sensitive and the numbers work even at higher bridge loan rates, close now and refinance later β the credit repair + bridge loan strategy exists for exactly this reason. If there’s no urgency and the deal will still be available in 6β12 months, spending that time improving your credit can save tens of thousands in long-term financing costs. Above all, run the numbers both ways before deciding.
What types of commercial properties can I finance with bad credit?
Most commercial property types are available to bad-credit borrowers through alternative lenders: multifamily (5+ units), mixed-use, retail, office, industrial, warehouse, and self-storage. Some property types are easier to finance than others β multifamily and mixed-use tend to have the most lender options because they generate predictable rental income. Specialty properties (hotels, gas stations, churches) have fewer lenders at any credit level, and even fewer for sub-680 borrowers.
How fast can I close a bad credit commercial loan?
Hard money and bridge lenders routinely close in 7β21 days. In urgent situations β auctions, 1031 exchange deadlines, deal rescue β some bridge lenders can close in as little as 48 hours. Compare this to 60β120 days for conventional bank loans. Speed is one of the primary advantages of the alternative lending market, and it’s often the reason borrowers choose bridge financing even when their credit would qualify for slower, cheaper options.
Have a Deal? Let’s Talk.
In conclusion, bad credit doesn’t mean no options β it means different options. The commercial lending market in 2026 has more alternative capital sources than at any point in the last decade. The question isn’t whether financing exists for your deal. The question is which structure gives you the best path forward.
At Anchor Commercial Capital, we help borrowers navigate exactly these situations β matching deals to the right capital source, structuring bridge-to-permanent strategies, and protecting momentum when timing matters most. If you have a deal that needs financing and your credit is a concern, reach out. We’ll give you a straight answer on what’s possible.
About the Author
Brandon Brown is the founder of Anchor Commercial Capital, which exists to protect momentum when timing matters most. Based in Boca Raton, Florida, Brandon is a seasoned investor and technologist specializing in the intersection of commercial lending and data-driven deal execution. His professional background includes founding Rapid Surplus Refund and co-founding Lien Capital, experiences that inform his pragmatic approach to complex debt structures. Connect with Brandon on LinkedIn to discuss your next commercial deal.

