Commercial
and Apartment Construction Loans
"The Loan-to-Cost Ratio"
How
Much of the Total Construction Cost is
the Construction Lender Being Asked to Finance?Remember
- The Commercial Construction Lender Wants the Developer
to Have Some Skin in the Game
Commercial
construction lenders - over 500 of them - await your application
for a multifamily or apartment construction loan, a commercial construction
loan, a condo or residential subdivision construction loan, or a
land development loan. To apply to 400 banks and 100 hard
money construction lenders simply click
here.
The
Loan-to-Cost Ratio is different than the Loan-to-Value
Ratio. You are probably more familiar with the Loan-to-Value
Ratio, where the underwriter uses the fair market value of
the project after it is completed and occupied in the denominator.
The
Loan-to-Cost Ratio only considers what it actually costs to build
the project. For example, let's suppose that Jake and Beth
Smith own a piece of land near Ground Zero in New York City that
would be an ideal site to build a new office tower. The
land alone is worth $10 million.
The
Smith's want to build a new office tower to replace the one they
were forced to demolish after 9/11. Including the $10 million
value of their land, their contractor tells them that the total
cost to build the proposed office tower will be $100 million.
Since
Mr. and Mrs. Smith own the land free and clear, they only need $90
million more to build the new office tower. They could go
to a commercial construction lender, most likely a bank, and ask
for a $90 million commercial construction loan.
The
commercial construction lender would then compute the Loan-to-Cost
Ratio.
The loan amount is $90 million and the total cost is $100 million,
so the Loan-to-Cost Ratio is 90%.
Is
90% loan-to-cost too high? Traditionally commercial construction
lenders will only lend up to 80% of cost. And if a property
type is out of favor with investors, like assisted living, hotels,
and office buildings located in many over-built central business
districts, some commercial construction lenders might only want
to go 70% loan-to-cost.
But
loan-to-cost ratios are frequently
stretched. If the Smith family was worth $100 million, and
they were willing to personally guarantee the loan, many New York
banks would probably be willing to make the loan at 90% loan-to-cost.
And
if the Smith clan had been building office towers for three generations,
in other words they had a ton of experience, an aggressive bank
might even be willing to lend up them up to 95% loan-to-cost.
But
what if a developer just can't come up with 20% to 30% of the total
cost of the project? In that case, he will probably need to
either bring in a partner with more equity dollars or obtain a mezzanine
loan.
Commercial
construction lenders - over 500 of them - await your application
for a multifamily or apartment construction loan, a commercial construction
loan, a condo or residential subdivision construction loan, or a
land development loan. To apply to 400 banks and 100 hard
money construction lenders simply click
here.
George
Blackburne, III is a real estate attorney, the founder
of Blackburne & Brown Mortgage Company, Inc.
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