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Multi-Family and Apartment Investing

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Dee Mandrekar
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Mortgage on Commercial Properties

Dee Mandrekar
Posted May 4 2024, 12:52

I am planning to get mortgage for purchasing multi-family property upto 1.5M and wanted to know what would be the best options. PML are giving very high interest rates of 10% plus. I have good assets with me just not a lot liquid cash sitting around to pay that much. Anyone can recommend this newbie some good directions pls.

Thanks in advance.

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Greg Kasmer
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Philadelphia
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Greg Kasmer
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Philadelphia
Replied May 6 2024, 09:30

Dee - As a newer investor, some of the options using "Agency Debt" (aka Fannie and Freddie financing) may not be available to you as they require 2+ years experience in multifamily space. I would suggest researching 10-15 banks and credit unions in your area (just google "multifamily lending in X area" and see who pops up) and talk to them. They'll need information on the deal (revenues, expenses, income, etc..), but they should be able to give you an idea of general terms (interest rate, amortization, fixed period, etc..) with some basic information. After you speak to 3-4 lenders, the remaining 10-12 should be easier as you'll know the language more specifically. You can also do this same exercise with DSCR lenders and mortgage brokers on Bigger Pockets. This is one spot where picking up the phone and calling people works very well. FYI - I would also keep track of all their answers on a spreadsheet for future use. Good Luck!

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Chris Mason
  • Lender
  • California
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Chris Mason
  • Lender
  • California
ModeratorReplied May 6 2024, 11:15

Mortgage broker.

I picked a 7 cap to intentionally DSCR-constrain the best options to 70% LTV - in place NOI and cap rate determines the down payment requirement, a property at a 6% capitalization rate would require an even larger down payment. Option 1 will require experience and is just there for illustrative purposes, 2 and 3 (in the absence of experience owning CRE) will require that the borrower be local to the property (if you want the best financing available on your first rodeo, stay local and stay turnkey, your lack of CRE experience is offset by your presumed local neighborhood level knowledge, etc, you can get fancy & still get good financing once you've got local & turnkey property #1 under your belt). Represented here in no particular order is one national lender, one that lends in lots of Southern states including Texas, and one local to Dallas. 

The down payment is what it is. There is no FHA 3.5% down on an apartment building or a shopping enter, there's lots of gov't incentives for "everyone to own a home" and since 1-4 units residential are all considered "single family" homes that means young investors get to ride that gravy chain for up to 4 units, but nothing like that exists for CRE (the gov't backed CRE mortgage options require MORE experience than traditional/vanilla commercial mortgages).

Let me know if I can help.

  • Lender California (#1220177)

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Gino Barbaro
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#1 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing Contributor
  • Rental Property Investor
  • St Augustine, FL
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Gino Barbaro
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  • Rental Property Investor
  • St Augustine, FL
Replied May 7 2024, 12:50

@Dee Mandrekar

I would look into connecting with mortgage brokers, community banks that lend on multfamily, and credit unions that lend on multifamily.

Looking for a partner would help with the liquidity problem

Gino