Hard Money Commercial Loans — What You Need to Know in 2026

Share

Hard money commercial loans - businesspeople reviewing loan documents

📅 Published: March 3, 2026

Direct Answer Box

How do hard money loans work for commercial real estate? Hard money loans are short-term, asset-based loans secured by the commercial property itself — not the borrower's income, tax returns, or credit history. Typical terms: 12-24 months, 10%-14% interest rates, 60%-70% LTV, with closing in 5-15 business days. Lenders underwrite the deal, not the borrower. Hard money is best suited for acquisitions, renovations, repositioning, and situations where traditional bank financing isn't available or fast enough. In 2026, the commercial hard money market exceeds $30 billion annually, with more institutional players driving rates down and terms up.

Last Updated: March 2026

Hard Money Isn't a Last Resort — It's a Momentum Tool

Here's the misconception that kills deal momentum: investors think hard money is what you use when you can't get "real" financing.

Wrong.

Hard money commercial loans are what you use when the deal requires speed, flexibility, or a structure that banks can't (or won't) offer. Waiting 60-90 days for a bank to underwrite your deal is a momentum-killer — especially when there are three other offers on the table. The borrower who uses hard money to close a distressed acquisition in 7 days, stabilize the asset in 6 months, and refinance into a permanent loan at 70% LTV didn't "settle" for hard money. They used it as the first move in a deliberate strategy.

The difference between a smart hard money borrower and an expensive mistake isn't the loan product — it's whether you have an exit strategy before you sign the term sheet.

How Commercial Hard Money Lending Actually Works

The Underwriting Model

Traditional banks underwrite the borrower. Hard money lenders underwrite the asset.

That single difference changes everything:

FactorBank LoanHard Money
Primary focusBorrower income, credit, net worthProperty value, location, condition
Credit score needed680+ typically550+ (some lenders don't check)
Income documentation2 years tax returns, P&L, bank statementsOften none required
AppraisalFull MAI appraisal (3-4 weeks)BPO or desktop valuation (3-5 days)
Decision timeline4-12 weeks24-72 hours
Closing timeline45-90 days5-15 business days

When a hard money lender evaluates your deal, they're asking three questions:

  1. What is this property worth today? (As-is value)
  2. What will it be worth after improvements? (After-repair value, if applicable)
  3. How does the borrower plan to pay us back? (Exit strategy)

If those three answers are solid, you're likely getting funded — regardless of your credit score, your W-2 income, or what your tax returns look like.

The Cost Structure

Hard money isn't cheap. But it's transparent. Here's what you'll pay:

Interest Rate: 10% – 14% annually

  • Institutional hard money (hedge funds, debt funds): 10% – 11.5%
  • Private hard money (individual lenders, small shops): 11% – 14%
  • Rates are typically interest-only with no amortization

Origination Points: 1.5 – 3 points (percentage of loan amount)

  • On a $1M loan, that's $15,000 – $30,000 at closing
  • Some lenders charge points on the full commitment, others on the initial draw

Other Fees:

  • Processing/underwriting: $1,500 – $3,500
  • Legal/doc prep: $1,000 – $2,500
  • Inspection fees (for renovation draws): $150 – $300 per draw
  • Extension fees: 0.5 – 1 point per extension period

The Real Cost Formula:

True Cost = (Interest × Hold Period) + Points + Fees

Example: $1M loan at 12% for 9 months + 2 points

  • Interest: $1,000,000 × 12% × (9/12) = $90,000
  • Points: $1,000,000 × 2% = $20,000
  • Fees: ~$5,000
  • Total cost: $115,000 (11.5% of loan amount)

That sounds expensive until you compare it to the cost of not doing the deal — or losing it to a cash buyer because your bank needed 60 more days.

When Hard Money Makes Sense (And When It Doesn't)

✅ Smart Uses

1. Distressed Acquisitions
The property needs work, the seller needs speed, and banks won't touch it because it doesn't meet their underwriting standards in current condition. Hard money bridges you from "as-is" to "stabilized" so you can refinance into permanent debt.

2. Value-Add Repositioning
You're buying a half-vacant strip center, a dated office building, or a hotel that needs a renovation. The business plan requires capital improvements before the property generates enough income for conventional financing. Hard money funds the acquisition and renovation simultaneously.

3. Time-Sensitive Opportunities
Auction purchases, 1031 exchange deadlines, partnership buyouts, estate sales. Any situation where the closing date isn't flexible and banks can't move fast enough.

4. Borrower Credit Issues
Recent bankruptcy, foreclosure, or credit event. Banks won't look at you for 2-7 years depending on the event. Hard money lenders will fund based on the asset while you rebuild your credit profile.

5. Portfolio Expansion Beyond Bank Limits
You have 10+ financed properties and your banks won't add more exposure. Hard money lets you keep acquiring while you arrange portfolio refinancing.

❌ When to Avoid Hard Money

Properties with no value-add angle. If you're buying a stabilized property at market price with no plan to improve it, hard money's premium doesn't make sense. Use conventional financing.

No clear exit strategy. If you can't articulate exactly how you'll pay off the hard money loan — refinance, sale, cash-out — don't take it. This is how people lose properties.

Thin margins. If your total project profit is 10% and your hard money costs are 11%, the math doesn't work. Hard money requires deals with enough spread to absorb the premium.

Hard Money Loan Requirements — What Lenders Actually Want

The Property

  • Types funded: Most commercial property types — retail, office, industrial, multifamily (5+ units), mixed-use, hotel/hospitality, self-storage, land (limited)
  • Condition: Varies by lender. Some fund heavy rehab; others want stabilized assets only
  • Location: Urban and suburban preferred. Rural properties may require lower LTV
  • Environmental: Phase I required on most commercial deals; Phase II if flags arise

The Borrower

  • Entity structure: LLC or LP required (no personal-name lending for commercial)
  • Experience: Preferred but not always required. First-time investors may get lower LTV or higher rates
  • Credit score: 550+ for most lenders; some don't pull credit at all
  • Liquidity: Typically 6-12 months of interest reserves (can sometimes be escrowed from loan proceeds)
  • Background: No active fraud charges. Felonies reviewed case-by-case

The Deal

  • LTV: 60%-70% of as-is value (some go to 75% for strong borrowers)
  • LTC (Loan-to-Cost): Up to 85%-90% of total project cost (acquisition + renovation)
  • ARV-based lending: Some lenders will lend up to 70% of after-repair value
  • Minimum loan: $100K-$250K typical (varies by lender)
  • Maximum loan: $1M-$50M+ depending on lender size

How to Refinance Out of Hard Money — The Exit Strategy

This is the part most borrowers underplan. Your hard money loan is month 1. Your exit is month 12-18. Everything in between needs to be mapped.

Exit Path 1: Conventional Refinance

The most common exit. Stabilize the property (occupancy above 80%, NOI documented for 3+ months), then refinance into a 5-10 year term loan at 6.5%-8%.

Timeline checklist:

  • Month 1-2: Close hard money, begin improvements
  • Month 3-8: Complete renovations, begin lease-up
  • Month 9-12: Stabilized NOI, order appraisal, submit refinance application
  • Month 12-15: Close permanent loan, pay off hard money

Exit Path 2: Sale

Renovate, reposition, sell. Common for fix-and-flip commercial investors.

Key consideration: Capital gains tax. Hold for 12+ months to qualify for long-term capital gains rates. Factor holding costs into your profit calculation.

Exit Path 3: Bridge-to-Bridge

Sometimes the timeline extends. A second bridge loan from a different lender can buy you 12-24 more months. Not ideal, but better than default.

Exit Path 4: Partner Buyout or Equity Injection

Bring in a capital partner to pay off the hard money while retaining an equity stake. Common in larger deals ($5M+).

Hard Money Lenders in Florida — What to Know

Florida's commercial real estate market supports one of the densest networks of hard money lenders in the country. Here's what's specific to the Florida market in 2026:

Market conditions:

  • Property values stabilized after the 2023-2024 insurance correction
  • Coastal properties may require wind/flood insurance verification before funding
  • Condo projects in South Florida face stricter structural inspection requirements post-Surfside
  • Foreign national borrowers are common and most FL hard money lenders accommodate them

What Florida hard money lenders are actively funding:

  • Multifamily value-add (5-50 units, workforce housing)
  • Retail strip centers (especially discount/essential tenant mix)
  • Industrial/flex space (logistics demand driving values)
  • Hotel/motel repositioning (tourism recovery)
  • Mixed-use in urban core areas (Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Tampa, Orlando)

Red flags FL lenders avoid:

  • Properties in flood zone VE (velocity wave zones) without mitigation
  • Ground-floor commercial in buildings with pending 40-year recertification
  • New condo conversion projects (regulatory uncertainty)

7 Questions to Ask Every Hard Money Lender

Before you sign a term sheet, ask these:

  1. What's your actual close timeline? (Not marketing material — actual recent closings)
  2. Do you fund from your own balance sheet or broker to other lenders? (Direct lenders close faster and have more flexibility)
  3. What are your extension terms? (If the project runs long, what does it cost?)
  4. Do you require personal guarantees? (Most do for commercial — know the terms)
  5. How do renovation draws work? (Upfront? Reimbursement? Inspections required?)
  6. What happens if I need to sell before the loan matures? (Prepayment penalties?)
  7. Can you provide references from recent borrowers? (Legit lenders say yes immediately)

The Bottom Line

Hard money for commercial real estate isn't complicated. The property secures the loan. You pay a premium for speed and flexibility. And you need a clear exit before you sign.

The borrowers who succeed with hard money treat it as the first step in a larger strategy — not as a standalone financing solution. Buy, improve, refinance or sell. That sequence is the entire playbook.

The borrowers who get burned are the ones who take hard money commercial loans without knowing how they'll pay it back. Don't be that borrower.

Related reading:

Frequently Asked Questions

How do hard money loans work for commercial properties?

Hard money loans are short-term, asset-based loans where the commercial property serves as collateral. Lenders focus on the property's value rather than the borrower's income or credit. Typical terms are 12-24 months, 10%-14% interest, and 60%-70% LTV, with closings in 5-15 business days.

What credit score do I need for a commercial hard money loan?

Most commercial hard money lenders require a minimum credit score of 550, though some don't check credit at all. The property's value and your exit strategy matter far more than your credit score in hard money underwriting.

What are hard money loan rates in 2026?

Commercial hard money rates in 2026 range from 10% to 14% annually, plus 1.5-3 origination points. Institutional lenders (hedge funds, debt funds) typically offer 10%-11.5%, while smaller private lenders charge 11%-14%.

How is hard money different from a bridge loan?

There's significant overlap. Bridge loans are a broader category of short-term financing, while hard money specifically refers to asset-based lending where the property is the primary collateral. All hard money loans are bridge loans, but not all bridge loans are hard money — some bridge lenders still verify income and require higher credit scores.

Can I refinance out of a hard money loan?

Yes — that's the most common exit strategy. Stabilize the property (achieve 80%+ occupancy, document 3+ months of NOI), then refinance into a conventional commercial loan at 6.5%-8% interest for a 5-10 year term. Plan your refinance timeline before taking the hard money loan.

How fast can I close a commercial hard money loan?

Most commercial hard money lenders can close in 5-15 business days. Some close in as few as 3 days for repeat borrowers with straightforward deals. The timeline depends on title work, appraisal speed, and how quickly you provide required documents.

Are hard money loans worth it for commercial real estate?

Yes — when used strategically. If the deal generates enough profit to absorb the premium (typically 10%-15% total cost over the hold period), hard money is a powerful tool. The key question: does the speed and flexibility create more value than the extra cost? For distressed acquisitions, value-add plays, and time-sensitive deals, the answer is almost always yes.

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. A graduate of the University of Florida, Brandon is dedicated to providing sponsors with the clarity and execution certainty required in today's volatile markets. Connect with Brandon on LinkedIn to discuss your next commercial deal.

💡 Have Questions? Ask AI
Have more questions? Ask AI to help you dig deeper into this topic.

Get Insights Delivered

Real-world deal intelligence and financing strategy. No hype, no generic advice—just what serious operators need to know.

Weekly insights. Unsubscribe anytime.

  • Continue Reading

Related Articles

More insights to help you navigate commercial real estate financing

DSCR Loans for Commercial Real Estate — Everything You Need to Know in 2026

Hotel Financing Guide — How to Finance a Hotel Purchase in 2026

SBA Loan Denied? Here Are Your Real Alternative Options in 2026

Got denied for an SBA loan? Here are 6 proven alternative financing options for commercial real estate in 2026, from bridge loans to DSCR to seller financing.

Have a Deal You're Evaluating?

Let’s have a calm, direct conversation about your financing strategy. No pressure—just experienced guidance when you need it.