📅 Published: June 8, 2026
Commercial construction loans finance ground-up development, major
renovations, and construction-to-permanent projects for income-producing
commercial real estate. Therefore, the loan must align the budget, draw
schedule, borrower equity, contractor plan, and exit strategy before the
first shovel hits the ground.
Commercial
Construction Loans: The Direct Answer
Commercial construction loans are milestone-based facilities where
each draw must support the next phase of the project and protect the
lender’s collateral position. In other words, the draw schedule is not
paperwork — it is the engine of the deal.
What Is a Commercial
Construction Loan?
A commercial construction loan finances the ground-up development or
major renovation of commercial real estate — office buildings, retail
centers, warehouses, multifamily complexes, hotels, and mixed-use
projects. Unlike a standard commercial mortgage where you’re buying a
finished building, a construction loan funds the build itself.
Here’s the key distinction: you don’t receive the full loan amount at
closing. Instead, the lender disburses funds in draws
as construction milestones are completed. An inspector verifies the
work, approves the draw, and the lender releases the next tranche. You
only pay interest on the amount disbursed — not the total
commitment.
In our experience brokering construction deals across Florida, the
biggest challenge isn’t qualifying — it’s structuring the deal so the
draw schedule, project timeline, and exit strategy align perfectly. Get
that wrong, and you’ll run out of money before the building is
finished.
Types of Commercial
Construction Loans
Ground-Up Construction
You’re building from scratch on raw or improved land. Lenders
underwrite the as-completed value and your construction budget. Most
ground-up loans require:
- Additionally, detailed construction plans and specs
- Furthermore, a licensed general contractor with a track record
- In particular, environmental clearance and permits
- Most importantly, a realistic project budget with contingency
reserves
Construction-to-Permanent
(C2P)
A single-close loan that converts from a construction facility to a
permanent mortgage once the project is complete. This saves you a second
round of closing costs and eliminates requalification risk.
When to use it: You plan to hold the asset
long-term, and you want rate certainty from day one.
Renovation / Rehab
Construction Loans
For substantial renovations — gut rehabs, adaptive reuse (converting
an office building to apartments), or major value-add projects. The loan
funds both the acquisition and the renovation.
Land + Construction Loans
Some lenders will finance the land purchase and the vertical
construction in one package, though these are harder to find. Most
require you to own the land free and clear (or with minimal existing
debt) before they’ll fund the build.
How Construction Loan Draws
Work
The draw process is what makes construction loans unique — and what
trips up first-time developers.
Typical Draw Schedule
| Phase | % of Budget | What’s Funded |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-construction | 5–10% | Permits, architectural plans, site prep |
| Foundation | 15–20% | Excavation, foundation, underground utilities |
| Framing/Structure | 25–30% | Structural framing, roofing, exterior walls |
| MEP Rough-in | 15–20% | Mechanical, electrical, plumbing (rough) |
| Finishes | 15–20% | Interior finishes, fixtures, landscaping |
| Retainage Release | 5–10% | Held back until final inspection and CO |
How Draw Inspections Work
- Contractor completes a milestone and submits a draw request
- Lender sends a third-party inspector to verify the work
- Inspector confirms the work matches the approved budget line
items - Lender releases funds (usually within 5–10 business days)
- Retainage: Most lenders hold back 5–10% of each
draw until the certificate of occupancy (CO) is issued
Pro tip: Build a 10–15% contingency into your
construction budget. Unexpected costs — material price spikes, weather
delays, change orders — are the norm, not the exception. Lenders won’t
increase the loan amount mid-project.
Commercial
Construction Loan Terms in 2026
| Parameter | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Loan Amount | $500K – $50M+ |
| Loan-to-Cost (LTC) | 65% – 80% |
| Loan-to-Value (LTV) | 55% – 75% of as-completed value |
| Interest Rate | 8% – 13% (floating) |
| Term | 12 – 36 months (construction period + extension options) |
| Extension Options | 6–12 month extensions (usually with a fee) |
| Interest Reserve | Typically required (12–24 months of interest funded into the loan) |
| Origination Fee | 1.5% – 3% |
| Recourse | Usually full recourse; non-recourse available for $5M+ |
| Draw Inspections | $250–$500 per inspection |
| Contingency Required | 10–15% of hard costs |
What Do Lenders Look At?
Construction lending is riskier than permanent financing. The
building doesn’t exist yet — there’s no cash flow, no tenants, and no
proven value. Here’s what lenders evaluate:
1. Developer Experience
This is the #1 factor. Have you completed similar projects before?
How many? Were they on time and on budget?
First-time developers: You’ll need to either partner
with an experienced developer, hire a development manager, or work with
lenders who specialize in sponsoring newer developers (they exist — we
work with several).
2. General Contractor
Qualifications
Lenders will underwrite your GC almost as heavily as they underwrite
you. They want: – Consequently, a licensed, bonded, and insured
contractor – However, a track record of completing similar projects –
Meanwhile, financial statements showing the GC can weather delays –
Therefore, a fixed-price contract (cost-plus contracts are harder to
finance)
3. Project Feasibility
- Additionally, does the market support the proposed rents or sale
prices? - Furthermore, is the location right for this product type?
- In particular, what’s the absorption timeline — how long to lease up
or sell? - Most importantly, what comparable projects have been built
recently?
4. Budget and Pro Forma
- Consequently, is the construction budget realistic and line-item
detailed? - However, does the pro forma show adequate returns to justify the
risk? - Meanwhile, what’s the debt yield at stabilization?
- Therefore, is there a contingency reserve?
5. Exit Strategy
How does this loan get repaid? The three most common exits: –
Additionally, Refinance into a permanent mortgage once
stabilized – Furthermore, Sell the completed asset – In
particular, Construction-to-perm conversion (if using a
C2P structure)
Construction
Loans for Specific Property Types
Multifamily / Apartment
Construction
The most financeable construction category. Strong demand,
predictable absorption, and multiple exit options. Lenders offer the
most favorable terms (higher LTC, lower rates) for garden-style and
mid-rise apartment projects in growing markets.
Retail / Mixed-Use
Construction
Requires pre-leasing — most lenders want 40–60% of the space
pre-leased before they’ll fund. Anchor tenant commitments (grocery
store, pharmacy, national brand) strengthen the deal significantly.
Industrial / Warehouse
Construction
Hot sector since 2020. Build-to-suit warehouses with a signed lease
from a creditworthy tenant can achieve LTC up to 85%. Spec industrial
(no tenant in place) is tougher but doable in strong logistics
markets.
Hotel Construction
The most complex and highest-risk category. Lenders require extensive
feasibility studies, franchise approval (for flagged properties), and
experienced hospitality operators. Expect lower leverage (55–65% LTC)
and higher rates.
Common Mistakes
That Kill Construction Deals
Underestimating the budget. Every experienced
developer will tell you: it always costs more than you think. Build in
contingency or don’t build at all.Choosing the wrong GC. The cheapest contractor
isn’t the best contractor. Lenders will reject a deal if the GC doesn’t
have the right experience and financials.No exit strategy. “I’ll figure it out when it’s
done” isn’t a plan. Lenders need to see a clear, realistic path to
repayment before they fund.Ignoring the draw process. Late draw requests,
incomplete documentation, and sloppy budget tracking create costly
delays. Treat draw management like a full-time job.Over-leveraging. Just because a lender will give
you 80% LTC doesn’t mean you should take it. Higher leverage means
higher risk — and if the project goes sideways, you’re personally on the
hook.
How to Get a
Construction Loan with No Experience
It’s harder, but not impossible. We’ve helped first-time developers
secure construction financing by:
- Most importantly, Partnering with experienced
developers who serve as co-sponsors on the deal - Consequently, Hiring a development consultant or
owner’s rep with a strong track record - However, Starting small — a duplex or small
mixed-use project before attempting a 100-unit apartment complex - Meanwhile, Bringing more equity — if you can’t
bring experience, bring cash. Higher equity contributions reduce lender
risk. - Therefore, Working with brokers (like us) who know
which lenders are open to newer developers and how to package the deal
to address experience gaps
FAQ
What
is the minimum down payment for a commercial construction loan?
Most commercial construction loans require 20–35% equity (the inverse
of 65–80% LTC). Your equity can come from cash, land value, or a
combination. If you own the land free and clear, its appraised value
counts toward your equity contribution.
How
long does it take to close a commercial construction loan?
Typically 45–90 days from application to closing. Construction loans
require more due diligence than standard commercial mortgages — budget
review, GC vetting, environmental reports, appraisals with as-completed
values, and permit verification all take time.
Can
I get a construction loan for commercial property with bad credit?
Yes, but with limitations. Private and hard money lenders will fund
construction deals for borrowers with credit scores as low as 550, but
expect higher rates (11–14%), lower leverage (60–70% LTC), and full
recourse. A strong project, experienced GC, and substantial equity can
offset credit concerns.
What
happens if my construction project goes over budget?
The borrower is responsible for cost overruns. Lenders will not
increase the loan amount mid-project in most cases. This is why
contingency reserves (10–15% of hard costs) are critical. If you exhaust
your contingency, you’ll need to bring additional cash or find mezzanine
financing to complete the project.
What’s
the difference between a construction loan and a bridge loan?
A bridge loan finances the acquisition of an existing building,
typically for repositioning or stabilization. A construction loan
finances the actual building process. Bridge loans disburse in full at
closing; construction loans disburse in draws as work is completed.
Construction loans generally have longer terms (18–36 months) and
require more documentation.
Do
I need a general contractor for a commercial construction loan?
Yes. Nearly all commercial construction lenders require a licensed,
bonded, and insured general contractor with a track record of similar
projects. Owner-builder arrangements are rarely accepted for commercial
construction loans. The GC must provide a fixed-price or
guaranteed-maximum-price (GMP) contract.
Need
construction financing? Whether it’s your first ground-up
project or your twentieth, we’ll connect you with the right lender for
your deal. Get in touch
→
Related Anchor Resources
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 an investor and technologist focused on the
intersection of commercial lending and data-driven deal execution. His
experience founding Rapid Surplus Refund and co-founding Lien Capital
informs his practical approach to complex debt structures,
time-sensitive closings, and investor financing strategy. Connect with
Brandon on LinkedIn to discuss your next commercial deal.
SameAs schema:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/brandon-brown-anchor/

