Private Lending & Conventional Mortgage Advice
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies

Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal


Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback
Updated about 9 years ago on . Most recent reply

Realistic? Or a pipedream?
Hey BP,
I was wondering if anyone could tell me if this idea is realistic, or just hopes and dreams. To finance my first property, would it be possible to get a loan for the down payment, and finance the rest through either a mortgage or private lender? I was specifically thinking of either a signature loan or a loan through something like LendingClub.com, which is a peer to peer lending site. That would cover most, if not all of the down payment. Then, finance the rest of the deal through something like a hard money lender. Is that possible? Has anyone tried that strategy before?
This would be for my first deal, and I am in the New Orleans, LA area.
Any and all advice and insight on this is greatly appreciated!
Sean
Most Popular Reply

Traditionally, lenders dislike the down payment to be OPM, as that signals the buyer has no skin in the game and thus is a higher risk. This is about the same risk to them as a Stated Income (aka non-verified) loan and that's what had a major impact on the 2008 RE bubble.