Loan Types

Bridge Loan

A short-term loan that 'bridges' the gap until permanent financing or a sale. Common in investor real estate to acquire or stabilize a property fast, then refinance or sell.

A bridge loan is short-term financing that carries a borrower from one position to another — most often from a fast acquisition to permanent financing or a sale. The loan "bridges" the timing gap. Terms typically run 6 to 24 months, interest-only, with the full balance due as a balloon at maturity.

In investor real estate, bridge loans and hard money loans overlap heavily — both are asset-based, speed-focused, and short-term. The distinction is mostly one of emphasis: "hard money" stresses that the loan is collateral-driven; "bridge" stresses that it's temporary by design.

When investors use a bridge loan

  • Speed acquisitions. Win a competitive or distressed deal by closing in days, then refinance into a DSCR loan once the dust settles.
  • Stabilization. Buy a property with vacancy or deferred maintenance, lease it up or repair it, then refinance at a higher value.
  • BRRRR bridging. Fund the buy-and-rehab phase with a bridge, then take cash out with a long-term refinance.
  • Buy before you sell. Acquire the next property before the current one closes.

How a bridge loan is structured

Feature Typical
Term 6–24 months
Payments Interest-only
Payoff Balloon at maturity (refinance or sale)
Rate Higher than long-term financing
LTV 70–80% of as-is value
Underwriting Asset-first; light income docs

The exit is everything

Because a bridge loan ends in a balloon, the exit strategy is the heart of the deal. Before taking one, know exactly how you'll pay it off — a confirmed refinance, a listing and sale, or a takeout commitment. A bridge loan with no credible exit is how investors get caught when the balloon comes due. Pair every bridge with a realistic timeline and a backstop in case the primary exit slips.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a bridge loan and hard money?

They overlap almost entirely in investor real estate. Both are short-term, asset-based, and fast. 'Bridge' emphasizes that the financing is temporary until a sale or refinance; 'hard money' emphasizes that it's secured primarily by the property rather than the borrower's income.

How long is a bridge loan?

Most investor bridge loans run 6 to 24 months. They are interest-only with the principal due as a balloon at the end, repaid by refinancing into permanent financing or selling the property.

What happens if I can't refinance or sell before the balloon?

You may be able to negotiate an extension (often for a fee), but there's no guarantee. That's why a credible exit strategy is essential before taking a bridge loan. Always have a backup plan if your primary exit slips.

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