📅 Published: May 29, 2026
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Small multifamily loans finance apartment buildings
with five or more units, often in the 5–20 unit range. Because these
properties are commercial real estate, lenders focus on rent, expenses,
debt coverage, property condition, cash reserves, and exit plan rather
than standard home loan rules.
For clean, stable properties, bank, agency, or DSCR-style financing
may work. However, value-add deals often need a different path. If the
building has low rents, repairs, or a fast closing date, bridge financing
can fund the purchase first and give the investor time to improve the
property before refinancing.
Best Use Case for Small Multifamily Loans
In short, small multifamily loans work best when the financing path matches the building’s current stage. Stable buildings can usually support permanent debt. In contrast, properties with repairs, low rents, or a fast closing often need bridge capital first.
The Momentum-Killer: Thinking Five Units Is Just a Bigger Duplex
A fourplex can still live in the residential lending world. A
five-unit building usually does not.
That one-unit difference changes the loan review. Instead of a simple
home loan review, lenders treat the building as an income-producing
commercial asset. Therefore, the rent roll, expenses, insurance,
reserves, property condition, and borrower plan all matter.
What changes at five units
This catches many investors off guard. A 6-unit or 12-unit property
may feel like the next step after a duplex. However, the loan process is
very different.
That is not a reason to avoid small multifamily. In fact, the 5–20
unit range can be a strong entry point for commercial investors. Still,
the loan has to match the deal.
How Lenders Underwrite Small Multifamily Loans
Most lenders start with the property’s income.
They want to know what the building earns today, what it costs to
operate, and whether the net operating income supports the loan
payment.
The key number lenders check
The core formula is:
DSCR = Net Operating Income ÷ Annual Debt
Service
For example:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross scheduled rent | $180,000 |
| Vacancy and credit loss | -$9,000 |
| Operating expenses | -$72,000 |
| Net operating income | $99,000 |
| Annual debt service | $82,500 |
| DSCR | 1.20x |
A 1.20x DSCR means the property produces 20% more income than needed
to cover debt payments. However, lenders may require a higher or lower
threshold depending on the loan type, property condition, market, and
borrower strength.
Stabilized vs. Value-Add Small Multifamily
Small multifamily financing usually splits into two categories.
Stabilized properties
A stabilized property has strong occupancy, market rents, clean
books, and limited deferred maintenance. Additionally, the borrower can
show a consistent rent roll and predictable expenses.
These properties may qualify for longer-term commercial debt, DSCR
financing, or agency-style options depending on size and execution.
Value-add properties
A value-add property has upside, but also friction. Rents may be
below market. Units may need renovation. Expenses may be mismanaged.
Occupancy may be soft.
These deals can be attractive because the investor can create value.
However, the property may not qualify for the best permanent debt on day
one. As a result, bridge financing may be the better first tool.
The Bridge-to-Permanent Strategy
How the two-step plan works
The bridge-to-permanent strategy is simple:
- Acquire the property with bridge financing. This
protects speed and closing certainty. - Renovate units or correct operations. This improves
rents, occupancy, or expense control. - Season the improved income. This gives the next
lender stronger numbers. - Refinance into permanent debt. This reduces cost of
capital after stabilization.
This sequence matters because forcing permanent debt too early can
kill an otherwise good deal.
For example, if current rents are 25% below market, today’s NOI may
not support the desired loan amount. However, after renovations and
lease-up, the same property may support a stronger refinance.
Deal Math: Why Loan Type Changes the Outcome
Assume an investor is buying a 10-unit apartment building in Broward
County.
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | $1,250,000 |
| Current NOI | $82,000 |
| Stabilized NOI after renovations | $125,000 |
| Renovation budget | $150,000 |
If a permanent lender sizes the loan on current NOI, the loan
proceeds may come in too low. However, a bridge lender may underwrite
the as-is value, renovation plan, and stabilized exit.
The key value formula is:
Value = NOI ÷ Cap Rate
If stabilized NOI reaches $125,000 and the market cap rate is 6.5%,
the implied stabilized value is:
$125,000 ÷ 0.065 = $1,923,077
That does not mean the property is automatically worth that amount.
However, it shows why the business plan matters. The investor is not
just buying current income. They are buying the opportunity to improve
income.
South Florida Context: Insurance Can Change the Deal
In South Florida, small multifamily underwriting must treat insurance
as a major variable.
A building may look strong based on rent, but wind, flood, roof age,
and property condition can materially change operating expenses.
Therefore, investors should not rely on old insurance numbers from the
seller’s operating statement.
Get current quotes early. Additionally, confirm roof age, flood zone,
mitigation credits, and any required improvements. If insurance is
wrong, DSCR is wrong.
Property taxes also matter. A sale can trigger reassessment, which
may increase taxes after closing. Consequently, investors should
underwrite post-sale tax estimates, not just the seller’s current tax
bill.
Common Mistakes in Small Multifamily Financing
Using pro forma rents too aggressively
Pro forma matters, but lenders need support. Therefore, use actual
comparable rents, realistic renovation timelines, and vacancy
assumptions.
Ignoring unit-level condition
A rent roll does not show everything. If five units need major work,
the renovation budget and timeline must reflect it.
Assuming all lenders like small deals
Some commercial lenders prefer larger loan sizes. Meanwhile, some
residential lenders stop at four units. Small multifamily sits in the
middle, so lender fit matters.
Waiting until contract signing to solve financing
Good small multifamily deals move quickly. As a result, investors
should know their capital path before submitting an offer.
What Documents Help Protect Momentum
A clean package speeds up the conversation.
Documents to gather before you apply
Before approaching lenders, gather:
- Current rent roll
- Trailing twelve-month operating statement if available
- Unit mix and lease terms
- Insurance quote or current policy
- Property tax estimate
- Renovation scope and budget
- Photos of units and common areas
- Purchase contract or LOI
- Exit strategy: refinance, sale, or long-term hold
Most importantly, explain the story. If rents are low, say why. When
expenses are high, show what will change. For soft occupancy, include
the lease-up plan.
When Small Multifamily Loans Work Best
Small multifamily loans work best when the investor can clearly link
the building, the numbers, and the exit plan.
A stabilized building needs enough NOI to support debt. A value-add
building needs a credible plan to create NOI. In both cases, the lender
must understand how the loan gets repaid.
If the plan is to hold long-term, permanent debt may be the goal.
However, if the property needs work first, bridge financing may be the
tool that gets the investor to the better loan later.
The Anchor Perspective
Small multifamily can be the perfect bridge between residential
investing and larger commercial real estate. However, the financing is
not automatic.
The momentum-killer is trying to force a deal with repairs or low
rents into a loan built for a stable property. That can lead to delays,
lower loan proceeds, or a denial.
Instead, match the loan to the building’s current stage. Use bridge
capital when the property needs work. Then use permanent debt when the
income is ready. That is how you protect momentum and keep the upside.
Sources
- Fannie Mae Multifamily: https://multifamily.fanniemae.com/
- Freddie Mac Multifamily: https://mf.freddiemac.com/
- FEMA Flood Map Service Center: https://msc.fema.gov/portal/home
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.

