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Updated over 8 years ago on . Most recent reply

What does "to look at your experience" for a commercial loan mean
I am fairly new to investing, and thus far have stayed in the residential market. No commercial loans, however my end goal is to get to that point so I have been reading up on how to get the loan, requirements, etc. I keep seeing "investment experience is taken into account" for commercial loans. What exactly does that mean and how do I prove it?
At this point, I am only doing research on the loans. There have been a few 5 to 6 unit properties come up for sale, which I know means a commercial loan. I figure before long, I will end up investing in these. I understand the 25% down and how there is typically a balloon after 5 years, etc. I am just not sure how to provide proof of experience...
Most Popular Reply

@Lynsey Staes What commercial lenders are looking for is the type and amount of experience you have owning and managing (either yourself or though a 3rd party) the type of asset which you are trying to buy. So, if you have a small portfolio of SFR, duplexes, and 4-plexes and are trying to buy a 5-10 unit deal in the same market, you will likely qualify since what you're trying to buy isn't a whole lot different than what you own. On the other hand, if you try to jump to a 100 unit apartment complex, you are going to need to bring in a partner that has experience owning and managing that sound of thing! Make sense?
As far as how to prove it, you simply provide a Schedule of Real Estate Owned, or SREO. It is simply a spreadsheet of everything you own with a bunch of facts relating to those properties, such as the value, how long you've owned it, wtc.
Andrew