The Complete 2026 Investor Guide
Multifamily financing is where most apartment deals are won or lost. It happens in the capital structure, not in talks or due diligence. Get it wrong and a perfectly good deal becomes a liability. Get it right and you can control multimillion-dollar assets with a fraction of the purchase price.
I’ve personally owned and managed over 2,000 properties across more than 40 years of investing. I’ve used almost every financing structure covered in this guide and I’ve watched investors win and lose money based on how well they understood their options.
This guide consolidates everything in one place: FHA loans, agency financing, bridge loans, the capital stack, and syndication equity. For a quick reference overview you can download and keep, grab our free Multifamily Financing resource.
Residential and multifamily financing are two different games. Understanding which rules apply determines how you structure every deal.
Properties of 1-4 units use residential financing. At 5 or more units, you enter commercial territory and commercial lenders underwrite the property’s Net Operating Income, not primarily your personal finances. This one difference changes everything:
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For investors buying a 2 to 4 unit property and willing to live in one unit, FHA multifamily loans are the most accessible entry point available. Backed by the Federal Housing Administration and HUD, these loans offer terms conventional investment loans can’t match.
This is the house hacking strategy and it’s one of the most powerful on ramps into multifamily. Your tenants offset the mortgage, often dramatically reducing or eliminating your housing cost. For the full case for starting here, read why your first home should be a multifamily property. And when you’re ready to find the right lender, see our guide to finding an FHA multifamily lender.
For investors who don’t want to live in the property, conventional financing through Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac is available for 2 to 4 unit investment properties:
Once you’re ready to scale beyond 4 units, everything changes. See our complete guide to buying an apartment building for what the process looks like at 5 or more units.
At 5 or more units you’re in commercial lending territory. Commercial lenders underwrite the property’s income first. Your loan amount is determined by DSCR (minimum 1.20x to 1.25x) and LTV (typically 65% to 75%). For the full lender perspective, read our guide to how a lender underwrites a multifamily loan.
Agency financing is the gold standard for stabilized multifamily. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac purchase mortgages from approved lenders, enabling consistent, favorable terms at scale.
Agency loans require 90%+ occupancy for 90 days prior to closing. For value add deals that aren’t yet stabilized, bridge financing is required first.
Separate from residential FHA, HUD operates commercial multifamily programs for 5 or more unit properties through MAP approved lenders. These offer the most favorable terms in the market but at the cost of complexity and timeline. Learn more in our FHA multifamily loan guide.
HUD loans offer the longest terms and highest LTVs available but require 6 to 12 months to close and significant ongoing compliance. Best for long term hold strategies on stabilized assets.
Community banks, regional banks, and credit unions offer multifamily loans held in their own portfolio : not sold to the GSEs. More flexible underwriting, but typically shorter terms.
Portfolio lenders are often the best option for your first commercial deal or for properties that don’t yet meet agency stabilization standards. Build relationships with 2 to 3 local commercial lenders before you need them.
CMBS loans are packaged into securities and sold to institutional investors. They offer competitive rates and high proceeds but come with significant structural inflexibility.
Bridge loans are short term, higher rate financing designed for value add acquisitions for properties that aren’t yet stabilized enough for agency financing. If you’re buying to renovate and reposition, a bridge loan is typically your starting point.
Bridge financing is intentionally temporary. The goal: acquire the property, execute the value add business plan, stabilize at 90%+ occupancy, then refinance into permanent agency debt. This progression is the foundation of the BRRRR strategy applied to multifamily for a full breakdown, see our BRRRR method for multifamily guide.
| Bridge vs. Agency: When to Use Each
Bridge: property below 90% occupancy, renovation planned, rents significantly below market, operational issues to resolve. Agency: property stabilized at 90%+ occupancy for 90+ days, rents at or near market, clean verifiable financials, longer-term hold intended. |
The capital stack is the layered structure of debt and equity used to finance a multifamily acquisition. Every layer has a different risk profile, return expectation, and priority of repayment. For the complete breakdown with worked examples, read our capital stack guide. Here’s the framework:
The largest component : secured by a first lien on the property. If the deal fails, the senior lender is paid first. This security justifies the lowest cost in the stack. Most multifamily acquisitions are funded 60% to 75% by senior debt via the loan types covered above.
Sits between senior debt and equity. Secured by the borrower’s ownership interest in the holding entity rather than the property directly. Mezzanine fills the gap when senior debt doesn’t cover enough of the purchase price.
Sits above common equity in priority. Preferred equity investors receive a fixed return (typically 8% to 12%) before any profits flow to common equity investors. Unlike debt, there’s no set maturity date : though most structures include redemption provisions after a defined period.
The riskiest position but the highest upside. Common equity investors are paid last in any distribution or liquidation. In a multifamily syndication, common equity is split between General Partners (GPs) who operate the deal and Limited Partners (LPs) who invest capital passively.
Syndication is how multifamily investors close deals larger than their personal capital allows and how passive investors access institutional real estate without operational involvement. For the complete framework, download the free Guide to Multifamily Syndications (220 pages, free).
General Partner (GP): Finds the deal, arranges financing, manages due diligence and execution, oversees asset management. Contributes expertise and often 5% to 10% equity co investment.
Limited Partners (LPs): Passive capital investors. Contribute the majority of the equity. Receive a preferred return before profits are shared with the GP.
Syndications are securities offerings regulated by the SEC. Most operators use one of two Regulation D exemptions:
Always work with a qualified securities attorney when structuring a syndication. The legal structure protects both you and your investors.
| Free Resource
Download the free Multifamily Financing Overview a concise reference covering the capital stack, loan types, and key financing terms. Keep it on hand when evaluating deals or meeting with lenders. |
One of the most important structural decisions in multifamily financing. For the full comparison with worked examples, read our guide to recourse vs. non recourse multifamily financing.
| Factor | Recourse | Non Recourse |
|---|---|---|
| If you default… | Lender can pursue personal assets | Lender limited to the property only |
| Typical loan type | Community bank, portfolio loan | Agency, CMBS, institutional bridge |
| Deal size | Smaller ($500K-$5M) | Larger ($2M+) |
| Borrower experience req. | Lower : accessible for beginners | Higher : track record needed |
| Best for | First deals, local lenders | Scale, syndicators, investor capital |
Non recourse loans still include “bad boy” carve-outs that restore personal liability for fraud, intentional misrepresentation, or environmental violations. Non recourse protects you from market risk : not from misconduct.
Commercial lenders evaluate borrowers on four dimensions. Before approaching a lender, prepare accordingly. A current, complete personal financial statement is your financial handshake and lenders use it to verify net worth, liquidity, and existing obligations.
Most commercial lenders require net worth equal to or greater than the loan amount. A $3M loan requires $3M in net worth. For first-time commercial borrowers who don’t yet qualify individually, sponsors : experienced investors who co sign : can fulfill this requirement in exchange for a portion of the GP equity.
Post-closing liquidity: most lenders require liquid reserves equal to 10% of the loan amount after your equity contribution. On a $3M loan, you need $300,000 remaining in liquid assets. Liquid means cash or publicly traded securities : not real estate equity.
Agency and institutional lenders prefer borrowers with a track record of multifamily ownership. If you lack experience, partner with someone who has it. Experience requirements can be satisfied by your team, not just you individually : this is one of the primary advantages of working within a mentorship community.
Commercial lenders ultimately lend on the property. If the NOI supports a 1.25x+ DSCR at your requested loan amount and LTV, strong deals can overcome borrower qualification gaps. Use our free multifamily deal analyzer to verify NOI and DSCR before approaching any lender.
| Deal Stage | Best Financing | Typical LTV | Key Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| House hack (2 to 4 units) | FHA residential | 96.5% | Owner-occupancy 12 months |
| Small MF, stabilized (5-30 units) | Portfolio / community bank | 65% to 75% | 90% occupancy, clean T-12 |
| Stabilized 30+ units | Agency (Fannie/Freddie) | 75% to 80% | 90%+ occupancy for 90+ days |
| Value add acquisition | Bridge loan | 65% to 75% as-is | Clear business plan, equity cushion |
| Long-term institutional hold | HUD 223(f) | Up to 83.3% | Stabilized, 35-yr amortization |
| Large syndicated deal | Agency + LP equity | Varies | SEC-compliant PPM, track record |
| Capital recycling (BRRRR) | Bridge then agency refi | Varies by stage | Stabilized NOI at refinance |
Not every acquisition requires a large personal down payment. For a comprehensive breakdown of strategies that minimize personal capital, see our guide to how to buy a multifamily property with no money.
Before approaching any commercial lender or investor, prepare these items:
For FHA residential loans (2 to 4 units, owner occupied): 580 minimum, though most lenders prefer 620+. For conventional investment loans: 620 minimum, significantly better rates at 740+. For commercial loans (5 or more units): most lenders want 680+, and agency programs typically require 680-700+. In commercial underwriting, your credit score is one factor among many and the property’s NOI and your net worth are weighted equally or more heavily.
It depends entirely on the strategy and loan type. FHA owner occupied (2 to 4 units): 3.5% down. Conventional investment property (2 to 4 units): 15% to 25%. Commercial portfolio loan (5 or more units): 20% to 35%. Agency financing (stabilized 5 or more units): 20% to 25%. Bridge loans: 25% to 35%. In a syndicated deal, the GP’s personal down payment may be just 5% to 10%, with the balance raised from LP investors.
DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio) measures the property’s NOI relative to its annual debt payments. A 1.25x DSCR means the property earns 25% more than needed to service the loan. Most commercial lenders require a minimum 1.20x to 1.25x DSCR. If your underwritten NOI doesn’t produce sufficient DSCR at the target loan amount, either your purchase price needs to come down or your value add plan must deliver stronger income. Use the free deal analyzer to test your DSCR on any deal before approaching a lender.
Bridge loans are short term (12 to 36 months), higher rate financing for value add acquisitions that aren’t yet stabilized. They allow you to acquire, renovate, and stabilize a property. Agency financing (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac) is long term, lower rate permanent financing for stabilized properties at 90%+ occupancy. The typical progression: acquire with bridge, execute the business plan, stabilize, then refinance into agency. This is also the core of the BRRRR method applied to multifamily.
Possibly but it’s challenging. Non recourse agency and institutional lenders want to see a track record. Options for first timers include: partnering with an experienced sponsor who satisfies the experience and net worth requirements; starting with a recourse portfolio loan and building toward agency on your next deal; or participating in a joint venture led by an experienced operator to build your track record. Experience requirements can be satisfied by your team, not just you individually.
They are completely different programs. Residential FHA loans (2 to 4 units) are consumer mortgage products for owner occupants with 3.5% down. HUD 223(f) is a commercial multifamily program for 5 or more unit properties, offering up to 83.3% LTV, 35-year fully amortizing non recourse financing, and among the lowest long term rates available but with 6 to 12 month closing timelines and ongoing compliance requirements. Find a qualified MAP approved HUD lender if you’re pursuing this path.
Preferred equity sits between debt and common equity in the capital stack. Preferred equity investors receive a fixed return (typically 8% to 12%) before any profits flow to common equity (GPs and LPs). It’s used when senior debt doesn’t cover enough of the capital requirement and mezzanine debt isn’t available or practical. In syndications, some GPs raise a tranche of LP equity structured as preferred equity to provide investors priority distributions.
The four primary factors are: (1) the property’s NOI and DSCR, (2) your net worth and liquidity via a current personal financial statement, (3) your track record of managing income properties, and (4) the quality of the market and asset. For a full breakdown of what the lender reviews and how to prepare your package for approval, see our guide on how a lender underwrites a multifamily loan.
Yes. Self-directed IRAs (SDIRAs) can invest in real estate : including multifamily properties and syndications : through a custodian that permits alternative assets. Passively investing as an LP in a syndication through an SDIRA is common and relatively straightforward. Active involvement as a GP can trigger Unrelated Business Taxable Income (UBTI) and may complicate the tax treatment. Always work with a CPA experienced in real estate before deploying retirement funds into any deal.
Start with the fundamentals: understand how commercial underwriting works, what drives NOI, and how the capital stack is structured. Then download the free Multifamily Financing Overview and build relationships with 2 to 3 local commercial lenders before you have a deal. Get your personal financial statement in order and run the numbers on live deals using the free deal analyzer. The clearer your financial picture and the stronger your deal analysis, the more confident your first lender conversation will be.
Financing is learnable. Every experienced multifamily investor started without a track record, without lender relationships, and without certainty about which structure fit their strategy. What separated the ones who succeeded was education, preparation, and consistent action.
Start here: download the free Multifamily Financing Overview a concise reference you can keep on hand for every deal. When you’re ready to go deeper on deal analysis, underwriting, and structuring your first acquisition, join me at the next Multifamily Bootcamp or grab Rod’s free best-selling book: How to Create Lifetime Cash Flow Through Multifamily Properties.
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