Commercial Bridge Loans: Short-Term Financing for Properties in Transition

In commercial real estate, timing is everything. A property that doesn’t yet qualify for permanent bank financing — because it’s vacant, underperforming, or mid-renovation — is not unfundable. It’s simply a bridge deal. Commercial bridge loans exist precisely for this gap, providing investors and developers with the short-term capital to acquire, stabilize, and reposition assets before transitioning to long-term debt.

What Is a Commercial Bridge Loan?

A commercial bridge loan is a short-term, interest-bearing loan secured by commercial real estate. Terms typically run 12 to 36 months, and the loan ‘bridges’ a gap — either between acquisition and stabilization, between stabilization and a permanent refinance, or between purchase and sale.

Unlike traditional bank loans, commercial bridge lenders underwrite to the property’s as-stabilized value and the strength of the business plan, not the current in-place income. This makes them the go-to tool for value-add acquisitions.

Commercial vs. Residential Bridge Loans: Key Differences

FeatureCommercial Bridge LoanResidential Hard Money Loan
Property TypesMultifamily (5+ units), Retail, Office, Industrial, HotelSFR, 2-4 units, Condo
Loan Size$500K – $50M+$50K – $3M
Loan Terms12 – 36 months6 – 18 months
Interest Rate7% – 12%+ (current market)9% – 14%+ (current market)
LTC/LTVUp to 80% LTC, 70% LTVUp to 90% of purchase + rehab
Underwriting FocusT-12, rent roll, business planARV (After Repair Value)

Common Use Cases for Commercial Bridge Loans

1. Vacant or Partially Occupied Properties

A 50-unit apartment building sitting at 40% occupancy cannot service conventional debt. A bridge lender funds based on the stabilized value at 95% occupancy, giving the borrower 18–24 months to execute the lease-up. Once the property hits target occupancy, it refinances into a 10-year agency loan (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, HUD).

2. Heavy Value-Add Renovations

Older retail centers, distressed hotels, and functionally obsolete office buildings all require capital infusion before a permanent lender will touch them. A bridge loan funds the acquisition and the renovation simultaneously through a structured draw schedule.

3. Time-Sensitive Acquisitions

When a seller needs to close in 15 days and a bank needs 60, the difference is a bridge loan. Speed is a core value proposition — most commercial bridge lenders can close in 10–21 days.

4. Partnership or Note Buyouts

Bridge loans are also used to buy out a partner’s equity position or to purchase a distressed note where the underlying property needs repositioning before it can be refinanced.

How Commercial Bridge Loans Are Structured

Understanding the mechanics is critical to evaluating whether a bridge loan works for your deal economics:

  • Interest-Only Payments: Almost all commercial bridge loans are interest-only during the term. This maximizes cash flow during the stabilization period.
  • Origination Fees: Typically 1%–2% of the loan amount, paid at closing.
  • Exit Fee: Some lenders charge 0.5%–1% of the loan balance at payoff. Model this into your total cost of capital.
  • Extension Options: Quality bridge programs include 3–6 month extension options (with a fee) in case your business plan runs behind schedule. Always negotiate this into your term sheet.
  • Recourse vs. Non-Recourse: Larger loans ($5M+) may be structured non-recourse with standard ‘bad boy’ carve-outs. Smaller loans typically require personal guaranty.

Underwriting: What Bridge Lenders Look For

Bridge lenders assess five core dimensions of every deal:

  • Sponsor track record — have you successfully completed a project of similar scope?
  • Property business plan — is the value-add thesis credible? Is the market supporting your projected rents?
  • Capitalization — do you have sufficient equity in the deal, and do you have cash reserves?
  • Exit strategy — is refinancing into permanent debt realistic given today’s rates and market cap rates?
  • Asset quality — location, construction quality, and market fundamentals drive the lender’s confidence in their collateral

Sizing a Commercial Bridge Loan: The LTC vs. LTV Distinction

Bridge lenders think in two metrics simultaneously. LTV (Loan-to-Value) is based on the current appraised value. LTC (Loan-to-Cost) is based on the total project cost including acquisition and renovation. Most bridge programs cap at approximately 75%–80% LTC and 65%–70% of the as-stabilized value. Understanding both constraints is essential when modeling your equity requirement.

Transitioning Out: The Bridge Loan Exit

A bridge loan without a credible exit is just expensive debt. The most common exits include:

  • Agency Refinance (Fannie/Freddie/HUD): For stabilized multifamily properties, agency debt is the gold standard — lowest rates, longest terms, non-recourse. Requires 90%+ occupancy for 90+ days.
  • CMBS (Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities): Fixed-rate, non-recourse loans for retail, office, and industrial properties. 5–10 year terms.
  • Life Company Debt: Best execution for Class A assets. Low leverage, long terms, excellent rates.
  • Sale: Some bridge deals are simply value-add-and-sell strategies. The bridge loan creates the value; the sale is the exit.

Commercial Bridge Loan Checklist

Before submitting a bridge deal to a lender, have the following ready:

  • Executive summary / deal overview (1–2 pages)
  • Purchase and sale agreement or current ownership documents
  • Current rent roll and trailing 12-month (T-12) operating statement
  • Detailed renovation budget and timeline
  • Sponsor resume / track record of comparable projects
  • As-is and as-stabilized appraisal (or broker opinion of value at LOI stage)
  • Pro forma with stabilized NOI and targeted cap rate

Lender Tribune works with a deep network of commercial bridge lenders actively deploying capital across all asset classes. Submit your deal for a no-obligation quote.

Back to top button

Sign In

Register

Reset Password

Please enter your username or email address, you will receive a link to create a new password via email.