ποΈ Commercial Real Estate
Commercial Loans
Institutional-grade financing for office, retail, industrial, and multi-family properties.
π Secure Β· No Obligation
Why This Loan
Commercial Loans
Commercial Real Estate Financing
Commercial Loans for Investors, Business Owners, and Income-Producing Properties
Commercial real estate loans help investors and business owners finance properties that are designed to generate income or support a business purpose. These loans can be used for office buildings, mixed-use properties, retail centers, warehouses, industrial space, large multifamily properties, and other non-owner-occupied real estate opportunities.
What Is a Commercial Real Estate Loan?
A commercial loan is financing used for a property that is primarily tied to business activity, investment income, or commercial use. Unlike a standard residential mortgage, commercial financing is usually evaluated around the strength of the property, the income it can produce, the borrowerβs experience, and the overall structure of the deal.
For investors, the question is not only whether the borrower can qualify personally. Lenders also want to know whether the property makes sense as an investment. They may review rent rolls, leases, projected income, expenses, vacancy assumptions, market demand, property condition, and the borrowerβs plan for the asset.
This is why commercial financing often requires a more strategic conversation than a basic home loan. A strong deal may need the right loan structure, the right timeline, the right exit strategy, and the right lender match.
Acquisition Financing
Used when purchasing a new commercial or investment property. This can include stabilized properties with tenants already in place or value-add opportunities where the investor plans to improve income over time.
Refinance Options
Investors may refinance to improve terms, access equity, consolidate debt, or move from short-term financing into a longer-term commercial loan once the property is stabilized.
Bridge & Hard Money
VeeCasa can help with bridge loans and hard money deals when speed, flexibility, or short-term capital is needed for acquisitions, renovations, transitions, or time-sensitive opportunities.
How Commercial Loans Are Underwritten
Commercial underwriting is different from residential underwriting because the property itself often plays a major role in the approval process. Instead of focusing only on W-2 income, paystubs, or personal debt-to-income ratios, lenders may focus heavily on the propertyβs ability to support the proposed loan payment.
One of the most important measurements is DSCR, or Debt Service Coverage Ratio. DSCR compares the propertyβs income to the debt payment. In simple terms, it helps answer this question: does the property produce enough income to cover the mortgage payment?
Investors can learn more by using the VeeCasa DSCR Calculator. This tool can help estimate whether a rental or commercial-style investment may support the loan amount being considered.
| Factor | Why It Matters | What Investors Should Review |
|---|---|---|
| Property Income | Shows whether the asset can support the loan payment. | Rent roll, leases, market rent, vacancy, and operating history. |
| Debt Service Coverage | Helps lenders measure cash flow strength. | Monthly income compared to principal, interest, taxes, and insurance. |
| Loan-to-Value | Measures the loan amount compared to property value. | Purchase price, appraisal value, equity, and down payment. |
| Borrower Experience | Experienced investors may be viewed more favorably. | Past projects, current portfolio, liquidity, and management plan. |
| Exit Strategy | Especially important for bridge and hard money financing. | Refinance plan, sale plan, stabilization timeline, or construction completion. |
When Bridge Loans or Hard Money May Make Sense
Not every investment deal fits neatly into a traditional commercial loan box. Some opportunities move quickly. Others involve renovation, incomplete income history, distressed sellers, or properties that need to be improved before they qualify for permanent financing.
In those situations, bridge loans and hard money financing may be useful. A bridge loan can help an investor purchase or reposition a property for a shorter period of time while preparing for a refinance or sale. Hard money financing is typically more asset-focused and may be considered when speed and flexibility matter more than long-term rate optimization.
These options are not always the cheapest form of capital, but they can be powerful when used correctly. The key is understanding the deal before committing. Investors should review purchase price, repair budget, after-repair value, rental income, carrying costs, closing costs, timeline, and likely exit strategy.
Before moving forward, use the VeeCasa Deal Analyzer to review the numbers more clearly. A strong financing strategy starts with knowing whether the deal works on paper.
Good Fit for Commercial Financing
- Income-producing properties
- Mixed-use buildings
- Retail or office space
- Warehouses and industrial properties
- Large multifamily investments
Good Fit for Bridge Loans
- Short-term acquisition needs
- Properties being stabilized
- Value-add investment plans
- Temporary financing before refinance
- Time-sensitive closings
Good Fit for Hard Money
- Fix-and-flip projects
- Renovation-heavy properties
- Asset-based lending scenarios
- Deals needing fast execution
- Investors with a clear exit plan
How VeeCasa Helps Investors Think Through the Deal
At VeeCasa, the goal is not just to find a loan. The goal is to help investors understand what type of financing may fit the deal, the timeline, and the long-term plan. A rental property, commercial building, bridge scenario, and hard money project may all require different structures.
For example, a stabilized income-producing property may be a better fit for longer-term commercial financing. A property with renovation needs may require bridge or hard money financing first, followed by a refinance once the property is improved and income is documented. An investor purchasing a rental property may want to review DSCR numbers before deciding how much leverage makes sense.
The better the numbers are understood upfront, the easier it is to avoid surprises later. Investors should be prepared to discuss property value, rental income, expenses, taxes, insurance, repairs, liquidity, credit profile, and exit strategy. Strong preparation can make the lending process smoother and help match the deal with the right type of capital.
Have a Commercial, Bridge, Hard Money, or Investor Deal?
Whether you are buying an income-producing property, refinancing a portfolio, analyzing a rental deal, or trying to move quickly on a bridge or hard money opportunity, VeeCasa can help you review the financing path. Start by understanding the numbers, then connect with the right loan strategy for the deal.
Quick Overview
Best for: Commercial investors, developers, business owners, REITs
Common use: Office, retail, industrial, multi-family (5+ units), mixed-use properties
DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio): typically 1.20-1.25x minimum
LTV: typically 65-75% for stabilized assets
Why This Loan
Key Benefits
All Asset Classes
Finance office, retail, industrial, warehouse, multi-family, and mixed-use properties through our lender network.
Lower Down Payments
Loan sizing based on property NOI and debt service coverage β not just personal income.
Flexible Structures
Permanent loans, bridge financing, construction loans, and mezz debt available depending on need.
Portfolio Financing
Finance multiple commercial assets under umbrella structures or cross-collateralized arrangements.
Bridge to Permanent
Short-term bridge loans available to stabilize assets before placing permanent debt.
Experienced Lenders
Our commercial lender network understands complex deal structures and can accommodate most scenarios.
Qualifying
Qualification OverView
General Requirements
DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio): typically 1.20-1.25x minimum
LTV: typically 65-75% for stabilized assets
Borrower experience and track record reviewed
Net operating income (NOI) documentation required
Final qualification is determined by individual lenders. Requirements vary. This is for informational purposes only.
Typical Documentation
Rent rolls and current leases
Last 2-3 years of property operating statements
Borrower personal financial statements
Entity formation documents and operating agreements
Documentation requirements vary by lender and loan program. Your matched lender will provide a specific list.
See if this loan fits your scenario
FAQ
Commercial Loans
Questions
DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio) measures how much cash flow the property generates relative to its debt payments. A 1.25x DSCR means the property generates 25% more income than needed to cover debt β lenders see this as a buffer against vacancies or expenses.
Our lender network covers office, retail, industrial, warehouse, self-storage, multi-family (5+ units), mixed-use, and special-purpose properties. Hospitality and land may have limited options.
Permanent commercial loans typically have 5-10 year terms with 20-30 year amortization. Bridge loans are shorter, typically 12-36 months. Construction loans match the project timeline plus a stabilization period.
Many commercial lenders require a personal guarantee from principals owning 20%+ of the borrowing entity. Exceptions exist for strong stabilized assets or highly experienced sponsors.