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Updated over 9 years ago on . Most recent reply

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17
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Alan Corey
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Decatur, GA
5
Votes |
17
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Financing a 50% vacant 16-family

Alan Corey
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Decatur, GA
Posted

I own several 2-families and a 4-family which I was able to acquire all through conventional residential mortgages.  This will be my first time going the commercial lending route and I'm running into some nuances I'm unfamiliar with. 

I'm looking at a 16-family that has 50% vacancy.  The seller says the deal has to be in all cash as commercial lenders won't lend if it's 50% vacant.  A couple of questions on this if you don't mind helping me out:

  • What is the cut-off for vacancy for lenders to provide a loan? 70%? 80%
  • Even being 50% vacant and assuming a 30% downpayment on my end, the cash flow would still be positive and I would imagine appear low-risk to a lender
  • If I buy all cash, would refinancing and cashing out have the same terms?

Thanks for all your help! Long time lurker, first time poster.

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

17
Posts
5
Votes
Joe G Rampy
  • Pryor, MT
5
Votes |
17
Posts
Joe G Rampy
  • Pryor, MT
Replied

This is an example of why you should get lending parameters from lenders, not sellers. I've found that lenders tend to look at the business side of things. Where sellers tend to want someone to just write them a check for whatever the seller thinks he/she can get. Ask around to find a "local" bank that specializes in real estate lending then go make friends with them.

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