Chapter 01Start Here
The investor loan map.
Six product categories cover almost every deal an investor will encounter. Match the strategy to the category before you shop the lender.
Most investors learn about loans the wrong way: they hear about a product, get excited, and then hunt for a deal that fits it. The pros do the opposite. They lock in their strategy, identify the product category, then negotiate within that category. Below is the map I use with every investor I work with.
Category A · Long-Term Cash Flow
30-year fixed on a stabilized rental.
You want the property for the next 5 to 30 years. The math has to work on month one and improve every year as rents climb. Long fixed terms protect you from rate cycles.
Category B · Acquisition + Stabilization
Short-term to acquire, then refi.
The property needs work. You need to close fast, fund rehab, then stabilize and refi to long-term. Hard money is the bridge between buying and qualifying.
Category C · Velocity Plays
Buy it, fix it, sell it inside 12 months.
The exit is a sale, not a refi. Speed matters more than rate. Most fix-and-flip products price for the velocity, not for safety.
Category D · Owner-Occupied (Consumer Loan)
Live in one unit, rent the others.
These are owner-occupied consumer mortgages (FHA, VA, conventional), which I originate in California (and refer out-of-state to a trusted partner in any state except New York). The lowest down payment available to any investor in America. House hacking a 2 to 4 unit gets you into multifamily with first-time buyer terms. The play is repeatable every 12 months.
Category E · Creative Finance
Take over an existing loan or hold paper.
You don't get a new loan. You take over the seller's loan, or the seller becomes your lender. Most powerful when sellers are motivated, sub-3% loans are still in place, or buyers can't qualify conventionally.
Category F · Specialty / High Net Worth
Foreign national, asset utilization, commercial.
Non-US citizens, HNW investors qualifying on assets instead of income, and 5+ unit commercial properties all live here. Niche, but powerful when they fit.
Chapter 02The Workhorse
DSCR loans, demystified.
The most popular investor product in America right now. Qualify on the rental income, not your tax return.
DSCR stands for Debt Service Coverage Ratio. The lender takes the property's expected monthly rent, divides it by the proposed monthly debt service (principal, interest, taxes, insurance, HOA), and gets a ratio. If that ratio is at least 1.00 (rent covers the payment), the deal qualifies. Some lenders require 1.10, 1.20, or 1.25 for best pricing. Some go down to 0.75 with a small rate adjustment.
The formula in plain English: Monthly Rent ÷ Total Monthly PITIA = DSCR ratio. A 1.25 DSCR means rent covers the payment 1.25 times over (25% buffer). A 0.85 DSCR means rent only covers 85% of the payment (you're cash-flow negative on day one, but some programs still allow it).
Min DSCR0.75 (some), 1.00 typical
Min Down20 to 25%
Min Credit660 typical, 700+ best pricing
Max Loan$3M to $5M typical
What you don't need: tax returns, W2s, paystubs, employment verification, debt-to-income calculation. The property qualifies, not you. Most investors find this hard to believe at first.
What you do need: 660+ middle FICO, roughly 6 months of PITIA in liquid asset reserves, a market rent appraisal (1007 for SFR, 1025 for multi), and a clean LLC if you're vesting in an entity.
Available across states, not just California. DSCR and other business-purpose investor loans aren't consumer mortgages, so I can place them broadly across states (subject to state and lender rules) — they are not limited to California. For consumer financing — conventional, FHA, VA, or bank-statement on an owner-occupied property — I originate in California and refer you to an American Pacific Mortgage partner I trust in any state except New York.
Business-purpose only. As I understand the rules (this is not legal advice), DSCR and other business-purpose loans are for investment/business use only — not for owner-occupied or personal/household use — and are not consumer mortgages; availability and terms are subject to state and lender rules.
Where DSCR loans actually shine
- Maxed out on conventional: Fannie/Freddie cap you at 10 financed properties. DSCR has no portfolio cap. Once you hit 10, DSCR is the only continuation path.
- Heavy write-off self-employed: Your tax return doesn't show the income to qualify on conv, but the property cash-flows. DSCR ignores your tax return entirely.
- STR / Airbnb properties: Some DSCR lenders use the AirDNA projected income (often 1.5 to 2x long-term rent), which can transform a marginal deal into a qualifier.
- LLC vesting from day one: Most DSCR products allow LLC title at close without the season-then-quitclaim dance.
Chapter 03Conventional
Conventional investment loans.
Lower rate than DSCR. Higher friction. Capped at 10 financed properties Fannie-wide.
Conventional investment loans (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) are the cheapest investor financing available, typically running 0.5 to 1.0 percent below DSCR rates for the same credit profile. The catch: you have to qualify on personal income, your DTI is calculated including ALL the housing payments on every property you own, and Fannie caps you at 10 financed properties total (counting your primary).
Min Down15 to 25% (1 unit), 25% (2-4 unit)
Min Credit620 (best pricing 740+)
Max Properties10 financed (Fannie-wide)
Reserves6 months PITIA per property
How to actually use the conv quota
- The 10-property cap counts all financed homes, including your primary residence. Your true investment ceiling is 9.
- Each new conv investment loan gets harder than the last because your DTI grows with each added PITIA. Plan the order: easier qualifiers first, hardest last.
- You can typically use 75% of market rents (per appraiser's 1007) as offsetting income for properties you already own. This makes the math work as the portfolio grows.
- When you hit 10, switch to DSCR. There's no Fannie continuation past 10. DSCR has no cap.
Chapter 04Short-Term
Hard money, bridge, fix and flip.
Asset-based, fast, more expensive. The right tool for acquisition and rehab phases.
Hard money loans (HML), bridge loans, and fix-and-flip loans are different names for the same family: short-term, asset-based financing where the property is the collateral and your personal financials matter less. Rates are higher (typically 9 to 12% in 2026), terms are shorter (6 to 24 months), and points are real (1 to 3 origination points common). The trade is speed and flexibility.
Hard Money · Acquisition
Buy a property fast in cash-equivalent terms.
The cash equivalent. Sellers treat hard money offers like cash offers because the loan doesn't depend on the buyer's tax return or debt picture. Close fast, refi to long-term within 12 months.
Bridge Loan · Acquisition Plus Stabilization
Acquire and hold while you stabilize.
Slightly cheaper than pure hard money, longer term, often allows partial draws as you complete renovations. The bridge between the messy property you bought and the stabilized property a DSCR lender will refinance.
Fix & Flip · Acquisition + Rehab Combined
One loan covers purchase plus rehab budget.
Funds wrap the purchase and rehab into a single loan with scheduled draws. You bring less cash to the table, the lender funds the rehab in stages as work is verified by inspection. Repaid at sale or via refi to DSCR.
Ground-Up Construction
Build it, then sell or hold.
Land and construction financed together (or separately). Draws funded as construction milestones complete. Refi or sell at certificate of occupancy.
The math that matters on hard money
- Origination points are paid up front and add to your effective rate. A 10% rate with 2 points on a 6-month loan is functionally a 14% APR.
- Most hard money is interest-only, which means the principal balance never amortizes. Plan your exit (sale or refi) before you sign.
- Lender will require an exit strategy memo. Vague answers like "I'll refinance" don't fly. Show them the projected DSCR and the lender you've already pre-qualified with.
- Default interest is brutal. Most HML defaults trigger 18 to 24% rates. If you might miss the maturity, refi before you default.
Pause · 30 seconds
Working a deal that needs hard money to acquire and DSCR to refi out? Email me the property and I'll structure both legs in one conversation.
Email the deal
Chapter 05Creative
Creative finance.
When the deal works, but the loan won't. The four moves every investor should know.
Creative finance is what you reach for when conventional financing won't fit, when the seller has a low-rate loan you'd love to inherit, when the buyer's credit is the constraint, or when a non-arm's-length structure unlocks economics that bank loans can't match. None of these are exotic. All four are routinely used by experienced California investors.
01
Subject To
You buy the property and take title. The seller's existing loan stays in place in their name. You make the payments. Powerful when the seller has a sub-4% loan and current rates are 7%+.
Best when
Seller is motivated, low-rate loan in place, buyer wants to skip new loan origination. Risk: the lender's "due on sale" clause technically allows them to call the loan if the transfer is discovered.
02
Seller Carryback
The seller becomes your lender. They hold a note secured by the property, you make payments to them on agreed terms. Often combined with a small first lien (conventional or hard money) and a seller-carried second.
Best when
Seller doesn't need all-cash, wants the income stream, doesn't want capital gains lump sum. Often unlocks better terms than any institutional lender will offer.
03
Lease Option
You lease the property with an exclusive option to purchase at a fixed price within a set window (typically 12 to 36 months). You control the asset, lock the price, and have time to assemble the financing.
Best when
Buyer needs time to season credit or income, market is appreciating, seller wants partial cashflow now and full sale later. Some lease payments often credit toward the option price.
04
Seller Wrap (AITD)
All Inclusive Trust Deed. The seller's existing first stays in place, you give the seller a wrap note that includes the underlying loan plus additional financing. You pay the seller, they pay the underlying loan.
Best when
Combines subject to with seller carry. Spreads risk and aligns incentives. More complex documentation, but extremely powerful in low-rate-loan-rollover scenarios.
Creative finance ground rules
- Always use a real estate attorney. The forms used in YouTube videos rarely hold up in California court. Spend the $1,500 to do the documents right.
- Disclose, disclose, disclose. Subject to is legal in California, but undisclosed transfers create both legal and lender problems. Make sure the seller signs an authorization permitting the transfer.
- Insurance is the silent killer. Subject-to deals where insurance is in the seller's name create huge claim problems. Restructure insurance the same day you take title.
- Have an exit. Most creative deals are bridge plays, not forever holds. Have a refi or sale strategy mapped before you write the offer.
Chapter 06House Hack
House hacking, the underrated entry strategy.
The lowest down payment available to any investor in America, repeatable every 12 months.
This is a consumer-loan strategy. House hacking is buying a 2 to 4 unit property as your owner-occupied primary residence (you live in one unit), then renting out the other units. Because the property is owner-occupied, these are consumer mortgages — FHA (3.5% down), conventional (5% down on multifamily), or VA ($0 down for eligible vets) — which I originate in California and refer out-of-state to a trusted American Pacific Mortgage partner in any state except New York. Those low down payment levels generally aren't available on pure investment-property loans, which is what makes owner-occupancy the entry point.
FHA on 2-4 unit3.5% down · 580+ credit
Conv on 2-4 unit5% down (HomeReady) / 15% std
VA on 2-4 unit$0 down (eligible vets)
Repeat CadenceEvery 12 months
The repeatable play: Buy a 4-plex with 5% down on conventional. Live in one unit for 12 months. Move out, convert to investment, buy the next one with 5% down again. Each property compounds rental income while you stack units at relatively low leverage. In this scenario, some disciplined investors build toward double-digit unit counts over several years — though results vary widely with market, timing, and qualification.
The math that makes this work: the rental income from the other 2 to 3 units typically covers 60 to 100% of your mortgage payment, so your net living cost is dramatically below renting a comparable unit anywhere else.
House hack ground rules
- The 12-month occupancy requirement is real. Lying about owner-occupancy on the application is loan fraud. Plan to actually live there.
- You can typically count 75% of the projected rental income from the other units toward your DTI on conv loans, even before they're rented. This is what makes the multifamily math work.
- Save aggressively while in the property. The whole point is to roll into the next deal in month 13. If you spend the rental income, you've broken the cycle.
- FHA allows only one FHA loan at a time, which means you usually shift to conventional from house hack #2 onward. Plan the financing arc up front.
Chapter 07BRRRR
BRRRR mechanics.
Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat. The five-step compounding loop that built half the modern landlord portfolios in America.
BRRRR is a financing strategy as much as it is an investing strategy. The goal: pull most or all of your invested capital back out at the refinance step so you can recycle it into the next deal. When executed correctly, you end up with cash-flowing properties and very little of your own money still in them.
B
Buy
Acquire below market. Off-market, distressed, auction. Hard money or cash. Speed matters more than rate at this stage.
R
Rehab
Force appreciation through repairs and value-add improvements. Budget tight, scope clear, contractor lined up before close.
R
Rent
Lease at market rates. The new ARV (After Repair Value) and the lease define the refinance value the lender will use.
R
Refinance
Refi to a 30-year DSCR or conv at the new ARV. Pull out 75 to 80% of the new value. Most of your cash comes home.
R
Repeat
Recycle the cash into the next deal. Same playbook, compounding portfolio. Three to four BRRRRs a year is realistic for a focused investor.
BRRRR financing reality
- Plan both legs of the loan before you write the offer. Acquisition lender (HML or cash) and refi lender (DSCR or conv) need to align on the timeline and the post-rehab value.
- Most DSCR lenders require a 6-month seasoning before they'll lend on the new appraised value. Some allow refinance on the lower of cost or current value before seasoning. Know which one your lender does.
- Cash-out refinance at 75 to 80% LTV on the new ARV is the standard. Do the math: if you bought at $300K, put $50K into rehab, and the ARV is $475K, a 75% cash-out gives you $356K. After paying off the $300K acquisition, you walk with $56K back, having put $50K in. In this example, net cost lands close to $0 to acquire a cash-flowing rental — actual results depend on the appraisal, rehab budget, rents, and refi terms.
- The refi appraisal is the whole game. A weak appraiser kills your BRRRR. Work with an LO (me) who knows the local appraiser pool and can request the right ones.
Chapter 08Specialty
Foreign national, asset utilization, commercial.
The loans most LOs don't know exist. For non-US citizens, asset-rich buyers, and 5+ unit properties.
Three specialty paths that solve specific edge cases. They aren't "better" than the standard products, but for the right buyer they're often the only path.
Foreign National
Non-US citizens, no US credit required.
Designed for non-US citizens (and non-US-resident citizens) with no US credit history. Qualifying is based on the property economics (DSCR-style) plus international banking references. Can be vested in LLC or trust.
- Standard 30-year fixed terms available
- LA and SCV are top markets for foreign capital, especially Chinese, Korean, Latin American buyers
- FIRPTA tax considerations matter at sale, plan with a CPA
Asset Utilization
Liquid assets serve as imputed income.
The lender takes 60 to 100% of your liquid assets, divides by 60 or 84 months, and that's your "income equivalent" for qualifying. Zero employment income required.
- Brokerage, retirement, and bank assets all count (often at different ratios)
- Powerful for retired investors, business sale recipients, trust beneficiaries
- Especially useful for high purchase prices where DSCR would require strong rent ratios
Commercial / 5+ Unit
The math gets different at 5 units.
Properties with 5 or more residential units are commercial loans, not residential. The product set, underwriting standards, and rate environment are entirely different. Loan sizing is based on Net Operating Income and cap rate, not personal income.
- 5 to 30 unit "small balance commercial" is its own category with specialty lenders
- Recourse vs non-recourse matters significantly at this scale
- Mixed-use (residential over retail) follows commercial standards even if mostly residential
DSCR + STR Hybrid
Airbnb income at the underwrite.
A growing subset of DSCR lenders accept short-term rental income (typically 1.5 to 2.0x equivalent long-term rent) as the qualifying income. A property that doesn't pencil at long-term rent often pencils strongly at STR rates.
- Lender uses AirDNA reports for projections; actual P&L for seasoned properties
- City and HOA STR restrictions matter, lender will often require evidence of legality
- SCV and LA each have specific STR ordinances, run them by me before underwriting
Chapter 09Scaling
Scaling tactics.
Cross-collateralization, cash-out refis, portfolio loans, and the 1031 exchange. The capital recycling moves.
Once you have 3+ properties, the conversation shifts from "how do I qualify for the next one" to "how do I deploy the equity I've built." These are the four tactics I see seasoned California investors use most often.
Cross-Collateralization
- Use equity in a property you already own as collateral for the down payment on the next one.
- Common with portfolio lenders and private money. Less common with conventional or DSCR.
- Lets you scale faster without liquidating cash, but ties properties together (one default could affect both).
- Best for short-term plays with clear release events (sale or refi inside 12 to 24 months).
Cash-Out Refinance
- Refi an appreciated property at 70 to 75% LTV, pull the difference as cash.
- Standard play to fund the next acquisition without selling. Defers any tax event.
- DSCR cash-out caps usually at 70%, conv at 75%, FHA owner-occupied at 80%.
- Run the math: a higher payment on Property A has to be more than offset by the cash flow on Property B.
Portfolio / Blanket Loan
- One loan covering 5+ properties, often at portfolio lenders or private banks.
- Single underwrite, single closing, single monthly payment, often LLC-friendly.
- Allows release of individual properties at sale (subject to LTV maintenance on the remainder).
- Best for stabilized portfolios consolidating from multiple individual loans.
1031 Exchange
- Trade one investment property for another (or several) and defer all capital gains tax.
- 45-day identification window from sale, 180-day close window, strict QI (qualified intermediary) rules.
- Powerful for trading up: sell a $600K SFR and use proceeds toward a $2M 4-plex, defer the gain.
- Loan must be "equal or greater" than the relinquished property's debt to fully defer.
The capital efficiency hierarchy
- Cash-out refi is almost always more capital-efficient than selling, because there's no transaction friction (5-6% selling cost) and no tax event.
- 1031 exchanges are powerful but rigid. Miss the 45-day ID or 180-day close and the entire deferral collapses. Plan with a QI from day one.
- Cross-collateralization can compress your timeline dramatically, but only if you have a clear plan to release one of the properties before market conditions change.
- Portfolio loans usually save 0.25 to 0.50% on rate vs maintaining 5+ separate loans, plus dramatically lower closing fees.