Multifamily permanent financing is long-term debt used to hold an income-producing investment property after acquisition, renovation, lease-up, or stabilization. It is not the same as bridge capital. Bridge capital gets the investor through a transition. Permanent financing is supposed to support the hold.
For real estate investors, the permanent loan is often where the business plan proves itself. If the property cannot support durable long-term debt, the acquisition price, rehab budget, rent plan, or leverage target may need to be reworked.
What Is Multifamily Permanent Financing?
Permanent financing is long-term debt for stabilized or substantially stabilized investment property. It is typically used when the property has enough income history, rent support, and condition stability to support a longer hold period.
Common permanent financing paths include:
- DSCR loans for 2-4 unit and select multifamily assets
- Portfolio or bank loans
- Commercial multifamily debt
- Agency-style debt for larger stabilized assets
- Cash-out refinance after stabilization
The right path depends on unit count, NOI, leverage, experience, property condition, and hold strategy.
Permanent Financing vs. Bridge Financing
| Topic | Bridge Financing | Permanent Financing |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Acquisition, rehab, lease-up, timing | Long-term hold |
| Term | Shorter | Longer |
| Review focus | Value, plan, exit, liquidity | Income, DSCR, NOI, stability |
| Best use | Transitional property | Stabilized property |
| Risk | Exit risk | Long-term payment risk |
The mistake is using permanent debt for a property that is not ready, or using bridge debt without knowing the permanent exit.
DSCR as a Permanent Tool
For many small multifamily investors, DSCR is the permanent loan path after the property is leased and income is supportable. Instead of qualifying primarily on personal income, the lender reviews the property income against the proposed debt.
This is especially useful after:
- A BRRRR project
- A fix-and-hold strategy
- A value-add duplex, triplex, or fourplex
- A cash-out refinance on a stabilized rental
- A portfolio restructure
The key is that the rent has to support the permanent payment.
What Lenders Review
Permanent multifamily financing usually looks at:
- Rent roll
- Lease terms
- NOI or rent support
- Taxes and insurance
- Property condition
- Appraisal and valuation
- Borrower credit
- Reserves and liquidity
- Experience
- Entity structure
- Exit and hold strategy
For 5+ unit assets, the review becomes more commercial. NOI, operating expenses, occupancy, cap rate, and debt yield can matter more than a simple rent schedule.
Cash-Out Permanent Financing
Cash-out refinance can be a powerful investor tool, but it has to be sized correctly. Pulling equity from one rental to buy the next property only works if the retained asset remains durable after the refinance.
The lender will review:
- Current value
- Current loan balance
- Requested cash-out
- Rent or NOI
- New payment
- DSCR after the refinance
- Business-purpose use of proceeds
The goal is not maximum cash-out at any cost. The goal is usable liquidity without damaging the property that created the equity.
Choosing the Right Permanent Structure
The right permanent loan depends on the property and the investor plan.
Ask:
- Is the property stabilized?
- Is the rent supportable?
- Does NOI cover the debt with a cushion?
- Is the investor planning to hold, sell, or refinance again?
- Is the property 2-4 units or 5+ units?
- Is the current rate environment creating negative leverage?
- Does the investor need cash-out or only rate-and-term refinance?
Debt structure should follow the plan. A long-term hold needs a durable payment. A property that may be sold soon needs attention to prepayment structure and exit cost. A value-add property may need bridge before permanent.
IMC View
Investor Multifamily Capital reviews permanent financing by starting with the asset. The question is whether the property has enough income stability to support the requested debt and whether the loan structure leaves the investor positioned for the next move.
Useful next steps:
- Review multifamily DSCR loans.
- Review bridge loans Massachusetts.
- See funded investor deals.
Business-purpose investment property financing only. Not for owner-occupied or primary residence loans. Available nationwide excluding CA, AZ, NV, ND, SD, and VT. Other restrictions may apply.