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How Investors Should Prepare for a Fix and Flip Loan Request

Fix and Flip Education

How Investors Should Prepare for a Fix and Flip Loan Request

A strong fix and flip loan request should clearly explain the property, purchase price, estimated after repair value, renovation budget, borrower profile, timeline, and resale strategy.

Fix and Flip Loan Readiness

A better loan request starts before the form is submitted.

Fix and flip lending is built around acquisition, renovation, resale, and execution. Private lenders want to understand whether the investor has a real opportunity, a clear project plan, enough capital support, and a realistic exit strategy.

The stronger the information, the easier it is to review the loan request. Investors should prepare the property facts, purchase details, renovation plan, estimated after repair value, timeline, borrower profile, and resale strategy before submitting.

Table of Contents

What this article covers.

01

Property Details

Address, property type, condition, photos, occupancy, and market context.

02

Purchase Price

Contract price, acquisition basis, closing timeline, and value position.

03

After Repair Value

Comparable sales, resale support, market demand, and value assumptions.

04

Renovation Budget

Scope of work, contractor plan, repair costs, contingency, and timeline.

05

Borrower Profile

Experience, liquidity, credit profile, entity, reserves, and execution support.

06

Resale Strategy

Pricing, hold time, listing plan, market support, and repayment path.

01. Property Details

The property is the foundation of the fix and flip loan request.

A private lender needs to understand the property before reviewing the loan request. Investors should be prepared to provide the address, property type, bedroom and bathroom count, square footage, lot size, occupancy status, condition, photos, and any known repair issues.

The property should support the investment thesis. The lender wants to know why the investor believes the property can be acquired, improved, and resold within a realistic timeframe.

Property Checklist

Prepare the basic asset facts.

Address, property type, photos, occupancy, condition, purchase price, estimated repairs, value support, and resale potential.

The clearer the property story, the stronger the first review can be.

Fix and flip investment property reviewed for purchase price and private lending request
02. Purchase Price

The acquisition basis must make sense.

Purchase price is one of the first numbers reviewed in a fix and flip loan request. The lender wants to know whether the investor is buying the property at a price that leaves room for renovation costs, holding costs, resale costs, and potential profit.

Investors should prepare the contract price, closing timeline, seller terms, deposit amount, estimated closing costs, and any details that explain why the acquisition basis is attractive.

03. After Repair Value

The ARV should be supported by real market data.

After repair value, often called ARV, is the estimated resale value of the property after the renovation is complete. Private lenders review ARV because it helps determine whether the project has enough value support after repairs.

A strong ARV estimate should be supported by comparable sales, neighborhood demand, property condition after renovation, square footage, bedroom and bathroom count, finishes, and realistic resale assumptions.

Comps

Comparable Sales

Recent sales near the subject property with similar size, condition, property type, and renovation level.

Market

Buyer Demand

Local demand, days on market, inventory, price trends, and resale competition.

Product

Finished Condition

The planned renovation level should match the resale price and buyer expectations.

Exit

Resale Support

ARV should support the final resale strategy, not just the investor’s target number.

04. Renovation Budget

The rehab budget should match the property and the resale plan.

A fix and flip loan request should include a renovation budget that explains what work needs to be done, how much it is expected to cost, who will complete the work, and how long the project should take.

Lenders look for budgets that are realistic, detailed, and consistent with the property’s condition and expected resale value. A vague repair number can weaken the request.

Budget Details

A repair budget should be specific.

Include major systems, roof, HVAC, electrical, plumbing, flooring, kitchens, bathrooms, exterior work, permits, labor, materials, and contingency.

The budget should explain the scope, not just the total.

05. Borrower Profile

Borrower readiness matters because execution matters.

A fix and flip project depends on execution. Private lenders want to know whether the borrower has the experience, liquidity, reserves, credit profile, contractor support, and judgment to complete the project.

Newer investors should be honest about experience level and show how they plan to reduce execution risk. That may include working with experienced contractors, real estate agents, project managers, or partners.

Experience

Project Background

Prior flips, renovations, rentals, construction experience, or related real estate background.

Liquidity

Available Capital

Borrower contribution, closing funds, reserves, and ability to handle overruns or delays.

Credit

Credit Profile

Credit history can affect structure, pricing, leverage, and overall borrower review.

Team

Execution Support

Contractors, agents, project managers, designers, inspectors, and other support roles.

Renovated home prepared for resale after fix and flip project
06. Resale Strategy

The exit strategy should be clear before the loan request is submitted.

The most common exit strategy for a fix and flip loan is resale after renovation. The lender wants to know how the property will be sold, what price is realistic, how long the investor expects to hold it, and what backup plan exists if the market changes.

Investors should prepare their resale price, comparable sales, estimated selling costs, listing strategy, expected hold time, and backup options such as refinance or rental hold if the property does not sell as expected.

Fix and Flip Loan Checklist

What investors should prepare before submitting.

A complete request does not guarantee approval, but it helps the lender understand the project faster and more clearly.

Property

Asset Details

Address, photos, property type, condition, occupancy, square footage, beds, baths, and market context.

Purchase

Acquisition Terms

Purchase price, contract status, closing date, deposit, seller terms, and estimated closing costs.

Value

ARV Support

Comparable sales, estimated resale value, planned finishes, and market support.

Budget

Repair Scope

Renovation budget, contractor plan, major repairs, contingency, and expected completion timeline.

Borrower

Profile

Experience level, entity, liquidity, reserves, credit profile, and project team.

Timeline

Project Schedule

Closing date, repair timeline, expected hold period, listing plan, and milestone dates.

Exit

Resale Plan

Target resale price, broker strategy, market demand, estimated sale costs, and backup plan.

Request

Loan Details

Requested loan amount, use of funds, borrower contribution, rehab draw needs, and capital structure.

Common Mistake

Do not submit a fix and flip loan request with only a target number.

A loan amount alone does not explain the deal. The lender needs to understand the property, purchase price, ARV, repair budget, borrower profile, timeline, and exit strategy.

The more organized the request is, the easier it is to review whether the capital fits the project.

Capital Fit

The loan should match the project.

A strong fix and flip loan request connects the purchase, renovation, resale, borrower, timeline, and repayment path into one clear project story.

The lender is reviewing whether the full deal supports the requested capital.

Related Reading

Continue learning about fix and flip lending and private capital.

Program

Fix and Flip Loans

Review Equity REI fix and flip loans for real estate investors acquiring and renovating properties for resale.

Private Lending

What Private Lenders Review

Learn what private lenders review before funding a business purpose investment property loan request.

Fix and Flip Loan FAQ

Common questions investors ask before submitting a fix and flip loan request.

FAQ 01

What should I include in a fix and flip loan request?

Include the property address, purchase price, estimated after repair value, repair budget, photos, borrower profile, requested loan amount, timeline, and resale strategy.

FAQ 02

Why does ARV matter?

ARV helps the lender understand the expected value after renovation. It should be supported by comparable sales, market demand, and a realistic resale plan.

FAQ 03

Does the renovation budget need to be detailed?

Yes. A detailed budget helps the lender understand the scope of work, repair costs, timeline, and whether the planned improvements support the resale strategy.

FAQ 04

Can a newer investor request fix and flip financing?

A newer investor may still submit a request, but should be prepared to show a clear plan, borrower contribution, reliable support team, realistic budget, and strong exit strategy.

Get Started

Ready to submit a fix and flip loan request?

Tell Equity REI about the property, purchase price, estimated after repair value, renovation budget, timeline, and resale strategy. A clearer request helps start the review with the right information.

Important Disclosure

Educational content for business purpose investment property lending.

This article is provided for general educational and informational purposes related to business purpose real estate investment activity. Content may discuss private lending, hard money concepts, fix and flip loans, bridge loans, underwriting, renovation budgets, after repair value, and investment property strategy.

Article content is not a loan approval, commitment to lend, rate quote, term sheet, legal advice, tax advice, financial advice, or investment advice. Equity REI provides business purpose financing for real estate investment properties only and does not provide consumer loans, owner occupied residential mortgages, or loans for personal, family, or household purposes.

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