DIP Loan Process — What CRE Borrowers Should Expect

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DIP loan process documents reviewed by commercial real estate advisors

📅 Published: June 1, 2026

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The DIP loan process is the sequence a Chapter 11 borrower follows to request debtor-in-possession financing, negotiate terms, seek bankruptcy court approval, and use funds under an approved budget. For commercial real estate borrowers, the DIP loan process usually includes emergency liquidity analysis, collateral review, a 13-week budget, lender diligence, interim approval, final approval, and a repayment exit through sale, refinance, or plan confirmation.

Because court timing can move fast, the DIP loan process should start before the cash emergency becomes irreversible. Otherwise, the borrower may lose leverage with lenders, creditors, tenants, vendors, and buyers.

The Momentum-Killer: Treating DIP Financing Like a Normal Loan Application

A normal commercial loan application asks whether the property qualifies. The DIP loan process asks a harder question: does this financing protect the bankruptcy estate better than the alternatives?

That shift matters. A lender may like the real estate but still hesitate if the budget is vague, senior creditor position is unclear, or exit strategy depends on hope. Therefore, the package must speak to lenders, bankruptcy counsel, creditors, and the court at the same time.

Step 1: Identify the Actual Cash Constraint

Before discussing proceeds, define the emergency. Is the issue insurance, payroll, taxes, vendor stoppage, tenant improvements, security, or a pending sale that needs runway? Additionally, separate urgent protection costs from nice-to-have spending. DIP lenders usually want proceeds tied to preserving collateral value, not funding a vague turnaround plan.

Step 2: Build the 13-Week Budget

The 13-week budget is the operating map. It shows opening cash, expected income, required expenses, professional fees, repairs, reserves, and ending cash. Moreover, it tells the lender whether the requested facility is sized correctly.

Requested DIP Facility = Net Cash Burn + Critical Costs + Timeline Reserve

For example, if the property burns $30,000 per month, needs $60,000 of immediate insurance and repair funding, and requires four months to complete a sale, the core need is roughly $180,000 before fees and reserves.

Step 3: Confirm Collateral and Existing Liens

Next, the lender needs to understand the capital stack. That includes senior mortgages, tax liens, mechanics liens, judgment liens, unpaid insurance, and any cash collateral issues. In some cases, the DIP lender may require a senior or priming lien. However, priming existing secured creditors is a serious legal issue and requires court approval.

Step 4: Match the Request to the Right Lender

Not every private lender wants bankruptcy exposure. Likewise, not every distressed-debt investor understands real estate operations. The strongest fit usually depends on collateral coverage, jurisdiction, lien position, requested size, and exit timing.

  • For example, a sale-process DIP may appeal to a lender focused on short-duration collateral protection.
  • Meanwhile, a reorganization DIP may require more confidence in operations and management.
  • Additionally, a property with environmental, title, or tenant issues may need a highly specialized capital source.

Step 5: Negotiate Terms Before Court Approval

Term sheets for DIP financing often address loan amount, use of proceeds, budget variance, reporting, collateral, milestones, fees, default triggers, and repayment. Because the order may control what the borrower can do, vague terms can create problems later.

Therefore, borrowers should negotiate operational flexibility where possible. However, they should expect tighter controls than a typical commercial bridge loan.

Step 6: Seek Interim and Final Approval

Many DIP loans involve interim approval for immediate funding and final approval after notice and hearing. This sequence helps stabilize the property quickly while giving interested parties time to object or negotiate protections. Specifically, the court may review whether the financing is necessary, whether terms are fair under the circumstances, and whether existing secured creditors receive adequate protection.

Step 7: Use Funds Exactly as Approved

After approval, execution discipline matters. Funds should follow the budget, reporting should be timely, and milestone dates should be monitored. Otherwise, the borrower can burn trust quickly. In other words, the DIP loan process does not end at funding. It ends when the borrower repays the facility through sale, refinance, or plan execution.

DIP Loan Process Checklist

ItemWhy It Matters
13-week budgetShows the actual cash need
Current payoff statementsClarifies lien position
Rent roll and T-12Supports property cash flow
Insurance and tax statusIdentifies value-protection risks
Exit strategyShows repayment path
Court timelineDetermines urgency and funding sequence

South Florida Packaging Notes

In South Florida, the DIP loan process often turns on insurance, taxes, and speed. Wind coverage, flood exposure, and vacancy clauses can affect whether a lender believes the collateral is protected. Additionally, property taxes and code issues can create priority concerns that must be surfaced early.

Therefore, borrowers should not wait for the lender to discover these items. Put them in the package, explain the plan, and show how the requested financing protects value. That level of transparency can make the request feel controlled instead of chaotic.

Where Anchor Fits

Anchor Commercial Capital helps commercial real estate borrowers pressure-test the capital request before lender outreach. Additionally, we can compare DIP financing against alternatives such as foreclosure bailout financing, rescue refinance, or structured bridge capital when bankruptcy has not yet been filed.

If the DIP loan process is already underway, speed and clarity matter. Bring the budget, lien picture, property data, and exit plan first. Then capital conversations become much more productive.

Sources: U.S. Courts Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Basics; 11 U.S.C. § 364.

Common DIP Loan Process Mistakes

Several mistakes create avoidable friction. First, borrowers sometimes ask for a round number instead of tying proceeds to specific budget line items. That makes the request look like desperation capital. Instead, each dollar should connect to insurance, taxes, payroll, repairs, professional fees, or a defined sale timeline.

Second, borrowers may ignore creditor optics. Even when the financing makes business sense, existing secured creditors may object if they believe the loan erodes their position. Therefore, the package should explain why the funding preserves collateral value and how the repayment path protects the estate.

Third, the borrower may overpromise on timing. A 30-day sale plan sounds attractive, but if diligence, title, buyer financing, or court approval will take longer, the DIP budget should reflect reality. In fact, conservative timing often builds more lender confidence than an optimistic schedule that breaks in week two.

How to Keep the DIP Loan Process Moving

The best way to move quickly is to remove uncertainty before lenders ask. Prepare a clean folder with the petition date, case number, proposed budget, property financials, rent roll, payoff statements, insurance status, tax information, photos, repair bids, and exit materials. Additionally, keep counsel, the borrower, and the capital advisor aligned on the same version of the story.

Most importantly, make the request easy to underwrite. The lender should understand what the money does, why it matters now, what collateral supports it, and how repayment happens. When those four answers are clear, the DIP loan process has a real chance to protect momentum instead of becoming another delay.


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 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.

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