Hard Money Loan Calculator 2026 | Fix-and-Flip & BRRRR Deal Analyzer

Underwrite the complete capital stack, not just the interest rate. This underwriting engine estimates your origination points, exact Cash-to-Close, monthly holding costs, construction draw schedule impacts, DSCR cash-out refinance viability, and net ROI. It also stress-tests your Maximum Allowable Offer (MAO) against timeline delays, cost overruns, and ARV appraisal shortfalls.

Hard money carry + points Draw schedule realism Refinance exit testing Sale-exit sensitivity MAO guidance PDF + WhatsApp sharing
1Acquisition & Hard Money Inputs
2Project, Hold & Draw Schedule
3Exit Analysis & Stress Test
This analyzer estimates hard money acquisition, carry, rehab, and exit outcomes. Real lender leverage, holdback administration, draw inspections, and market conditions can change the final economics.
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Enter purchase, rehab, financing, and exit assumptions to estimate monthly carry, capital required, refinance feasibility, sale profit, downside sensitivity, and maximum safe offer price.

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How Our Pro Forma Underwriting Engine Models Your Cash-on-Cash ROI

This tool walks you through a full hard money underwrite in three input cards. Each step builds on the last — enter your acquisition terms, project details, and exit assumptions to generate a survival verdict, carry cost schedule, refinance check, and downside stress test in seconds.

1
Acquisition & The Capital Stack (LTC / LTV)
Enter your purchase price, total rehab budget, hard money rate, points, loan term, and closing costs. The tool calculates your loan amount using the Loan-to-Cost (LTC) percentage you specify and sets the foundation for all carry calculations.
2
Holding Costs & Construction Draw Escrow
Input your ARV, projected sale price, monthly holding costs, rehab timeline, and holdback percentage. The draw timing factor (0–100%) approximates how much of the rehab holdback is outstanding at any given point, which directly affects interest accrual.
3
Exit Strategy (Flip / DSCR Refi) & ARV Stress Tests
Define your refinance parameters (rate, term, monthly NOI, target DSCR) and your stress inputs — rehab overrun percentage, delay in months, extension fee, rate step-up, ARV downside, and sale price downside. The tool runs both scenarios simultaneously.
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The Deal Sheet: F&I Verdict, Capital Breakdown & Net Profit
Click Underwrite Deal to instantly receive a color-coded survival verdict (Refinance-Feasible / Sell-Only / Delay-Sensitive / Capital Trap), six KPI panels, a Base vs. Stress bar chart, and a full exit scenario table with DSCR, LTV, profit, and MAO.
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Decoding the Term Sheet: ARV, Points & Private Lender Jargon

Hard money lending uses specialized terminology that differs from conventional mortgage underwriting. Here are the critical terms used in this analyzer and why each one matters to your deal economics.

Loan-to-Cost (LTC)
The percentage of total project cost (purchase + rehab) financed by the hard money lender. Most lenders cap LTC between 80–90%. Higher LTC reduces your cash-to-close but increases monthly carry and limits your stress-case buffer.
LTC = Loan ÷ (Purchase + Rehab)
After-Repair Value (ARV)
The estimated market value of the property after all renovations are complete. ARV drives both your refinance eligibility (LTV check) and your exit profit. Hard money lenders typically lend up to 65–70% of ARV as a ceiling, regardless of LTC.
ARV-Based Ceiling = ARV × 0.65–0.70
Points (Origination Fee)
An upfront fee charged as a percentage of the loan amount. Each “point” equals 1% of the loan. On a $300,000 loan, 2 points = $6,000 paid at closing. Points are a fixed cost that erodes profit, making them especially painful on short flips or deals with tight margins.
Points Cost = Loan × Points%
Holdback & Draw Schedule
Most hard money lenders do not release rehab funds upfront. They hold (holdback) a portion — often 100% of the rehab budget — and release it in draws as work is completed and inspected. This means you often need bridge cash to fund work before receiving reimbursement.
Holdback = Rehab × Holdback%
Interest-Only vs. Rolled Interest
Interest-only structures require monthly interest payments during the term, keeping outstanding principal flat. Rolled (or accrued) interest adds unpaid interest to the loan balance each month — reducing monthly cash pressure but increasing the payoff amount significantly at exit.
IO Monthly = Principal × Rate/12
Debt-Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR)
Used for refinance exit viability. DSCR measures whether property income covers debt payments. Most DSCR lenders require 1.20x or higher. A 1.20x DSCR means net operating income is 20% above the annual debt service — critical for a buy-and-hold exit strategy.
DSCR = Annual NOI ÷ Annual Debt Service
Maximum Allowable Offer (MAO)
The highest price you can pay for a property and still hit your minimum return threshold. The classic formula: 70% of ARV minus rehab costs. This analyzer refines it by subtracting actual financing friction — points, closings costs, and carry — to give a more conservative and realistic ceiling.
MAO = (ARV × 0.70) − Rehab − Costs − Carry
Extension Fee & Rate Step-Up
If your project runs over its initial loan term, most hard money lenders charge an extension fee (typically 1–2% of the loan) and may step up the interest rate by 1–2%. These are modeled in the stress case to show how a delay compounds your cost of capital beyond just additional months of carry.
Extension Cost = Loan × Extension Fee%
Cash to Close vs. Cash to Completion
Cash to Close is the equity you bring to the closing table (down payment + points + closing costs). Cash to Completion is the total capital required through the full project — including all carry costs, rehab funding gaps, and stress-scenario overruns. The difference can be substantial and catches many investors off guard.
Cash Completion = Close + Carry + Overruns
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Real Estate Investor (REI) Case Studies: Flip vs. Refinance

Three common deal scenarios investors encounter — from a clean profitable flip to a stressed project with overruns. Use these as benchmarks when entering your own numbers.

The Deal: An investor purchases a distressed single-family home in a growing Sunbelt suburb for $240,000 with a $55,000 rehab budget. A hard money lender finances 85% LTC at 12% interest-only with 2 points on a 9-month term.

The Execution: Renovation completes in 3.5 months, the property hits the market, and closes in month 7. Sale price lands at $375,000 against an ARV of $385,000. Selling costs run 7%. Monthly holding costs are $1,400.

The Outcome: Total carry costs remain well below projections. The deal clears the MAO threshold with margin to spare. Even under a 10% ARV downside stress test, the sale exit stays profitable — validating the purchase price as a clean deal worth executing.

Verdict: Refinance-Feasible / Clean Flip. Strong ARV margin, controlled carry, and deal completion inside loan term. Textbook execution with acceptable stress tolerance.
Purchase Price
$240,000
Rehab Budget
$55,000
Hard Money Rate
12.0% IO
Points
2.0%
Estimated Sale Profit
~$42,800
Estimated ROI
~31%
Monthly Carry
~$4,060
MAO Check
✅ Pass

The Deal: An investor targets a value-add rental property — a duplex purchased for $310,000 needing $80,000 in renovations. The strategy is a BRRRR exit: stabilize, rent, then refinance into a 30-year DSCR loan at 8.0% APR.

The Execution: Hard money is at 13% IO with 2.5 points, 85% LTC. Rehab runs 5 months. Both units are rented at $1,800/month each, producing $3,600/mo gross NOI. The DSCR lender requires 1.20x and lends up to 75% LTV.

The Outcome: With a stabilized ARV of $480,000, the refi loan covers 75% = $360,000 — enough to retire the hard money loan and leave minor cash-in. DSCR hits 1.31x, clearing the lender threshold. The investor retains the asset with minimal cash trapped.

Verdict: Refinance-Feasible (BRRRR). DSCR clears 1.20x, LTV within range, ARV supports full payoff. Near-perfect BRRRR outcome with a positive stress buffer.
Purchase Price
$310,000
ARV (Stabilized)
$480,000
Refi Rate / Term
8.0% / 30yr
Monthly NOI
$3,600
Estimated DSCR
1.31x ✅
Estimated Refi LTV
~70% ✅
Monthly Carry
~$5,720
Points + Closing
~$16,400

The Deal: An investor acquires a distressed Victorian rowhouse for $295,000 with a $120,000 renovation budget — scope was aggressive from day one. Hard money at 13.5% IO, 3 points, 85% LTC on a 12-month term.

The Execution: Contractor issues add 20% overrun ($24,000 extra). The sale is delayed by 4 months beyond the loan term, triggering a 1.5% extension fee and a 2% rate step-up. The market softens, dropping the sale price 8% below projections.

The Outcome: The combined stress scenario — overrun + delay + price drop — pushes cash to completion past 40% of project cost. The estimated sale profit goes negative in the stress case. The deal is technically survivable at base case only because the original ARV margin was adequate — but it is now a Capital Trap if any one more variable moves against the investor.

🚨 Verdict: Capital Trap / Delay-Sensitive. Overruns, delay, and market softening compound to destroy the profit margin. Base case barely breaks even. Stress case is a loss. This deal needed a lower entry price to survive.
Purchase Price
$295,000
Rehab Budget
$120,000
Rehab Overrun
+20% ($24K)
Delay
+4 months
Stress Profit
−$18,400
Stress Verdict
Capital Trap
Extension Fee Cost
~$5,400
Cash to Completion
~$148K
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Pro Investor Tips: Surviving High-Interest Private Capital

Experienced hard money investors know the real danger isn’t the interest rate — it’s the cost of time. These field-tested strategies help you control carry, protect your exit, and avoid the traps that kill margins.

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Always Underwrite to the MAO (Maximum Allowable Offer)

The MAO formula gives your ceiling, not your offer. Build in at least a 5–8% additional buffer below MAO for unknown carry costs, permitting delays, and lender conditions. If you can’t hit your numbers 10% below MAO, the deal isn’t worth pursuing at that entry price.

Best Practice

Time is Your True Interest Rate: Managing Holding Costs

At 12% annually, every extra month costs you 1% of your loan balance. A 3-month delay on a $350,000 loan adds $10,500 in interest alone — before extension fees or rate step-ups. Speed of execution is a profit driver, not just a schedule preference.

Watch Out
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Pre-Qualify Your DSCR Refinance Lender Before Closing

If your exit strategy is a BRRRR refinance, speak to 2–3 DSCR lenders before closing on the property. Confirm their LTV cap, DSCR minimum, prepayment penalty, and seasoning requirement. Some lenders require 3–6 months of rental history before they will refinance — a fact that could add months of extra carry.

Best Practice
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Model Construction Draw Timing Conservatively

Many investors default to 50% draw timing, but in practice, lenders release draws reactively — after inspections, not before. If your contractor needs payment upfront to start each phase, you may have 70–80% of the rehab budget outstanding on average. A higher draw timing factor increases your accrued interest and your cash-to-completion figure.

Common Mistake
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Stress-Test Every Deal Before You Sign

Run the stress case with at least a 10% overrun, 2–3 month delay, and 8% ARV downside as your minimum assumptions — even on deals that look solid. If the stress case is a Capital Trap, you need a lower purchase price, a smaller rehab scope, or a different exit strategy before proceeding.

Risk Management
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Keep a 10–15% Liquidity Buffer for Cost Overruns

The most common way hard money deals fail is not bad math — it’s running out of accessible cash mid-project. Keep 10–15% of the total project cost in liquid reserves, separate from your project capital. This covers draw timing gaps, lender condition delays, and overruns without forcing an emergency extension or a distressed sale.

Capital Safety
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Negotiating Origination Points vs. Interest Rates

On a short 6–8 month flip, points have a much larger impact on your all-in cost than the headline interest rate. A lender charging 11% with 3 points on an 8-month deal costs more than one charging 13% with 1.5 points. Always calculate total capital cost — not just monthly carry — before choosing a lender.

Negotiation Tip
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Remember: ARV is an Appraisal Opinion, Not a Guarantee

Your ARV estimate drives nearly every metric in this analyzer. A single comparable sale that doesn’t translate to your property, an appraisal that comes in low, or a market-wide softening can destroy a deal that looked bulletproof on paper. Always build in an 8–10% ARV haircut in your stress test and confirm your comps are within 0.5 miles and 6 months.

Market Risk

FAQs: Private Lenders, Credit Pulls & Construction Loans

Answers to the most common questions from investors evaluating hard money financing, deal survival, and exit strategy math.

What is a hard money loan and how is it different from a conventional mortgage?
A hard money loan is an asset-based short-term loan secured by real property, typically used for fix-and-flip projects or bridge financing. Unlike conventional mortgages, which underwrite based on borrower income, credit score, and long-term amortization, hard money lenders underwrite primarily based on the value of the collateral (ARV) and the viability of the exit strategy. Rates are significantly higher — typically 10–15% — but approval is faster (days vs. weeks) and documentation requirements are lighter. Hard money loans are intended to be repaid or refinanced within 6–24 months, not held long-term.
What LTC and LTV limits should I expect from hard money lenders?
Most hard money lenders cap financing at 80–90% of total project cost (LTC) and 65–75% of ARV (LTV) — and they apply both limits, lending you the lower of the two results. For example, on a $300K purchase + $60K rehab = $360K project, 85% LTC = $306K. But if the ARV is $400K and the LTV cap is 70%, that’s $280K — so the actual loan would be $280K, not $306K. Always calculate both and take the binding constraint.
How does the interest structure (IO vs. rolled vs. balloon) affect my deal?
Interest-Only (IO): Pay interest monthly; principal stays flat. Best cash flow visibility, no balance creep. Rolled Interest: Monthly interest is added to the loan balance. No payments during the term — but the payoff amount grows significantly and you pay interest on interest. Balloon: No payments until the loan is due; then you pay everything at once. Both rolled and balloon structures reduce monthly pressure but increase the payoff figure and risk if the exit is delayed. IO is the most common structure for active fix-and-flip investors because the monthly cost is predictable and manageable.
What is a “Capital Trap” verdict and how do I avoid it?
A Capital Trap occurs when both the base-case and stress-case sale profits are negative — meaning the deal loses money even under your best assumptions and under stressed conditions. The root causes are almost always: (1) an overpaid entry price, (2) an underestimated rehab budget, (3) an optimistic ARV, or (4) high carry costs relative to the profit margin. To avoid it: buy aggressively below MAO, scope rehab conservatively, confirm ARV with 3–5 recent comps, and keep your loan term aligned with your actual project timeline. If the stress case is a capital trap, do not proceed at the current entry price.
What DSCR do I need to qualify for a refinance exit?
Most DSCR lenders require a minimum of 1.20x DSCR — meaning your annual net operating income must be at least 20% above your annual debt service. Some lenders allow as low as 1.10x for strong credit borrowers; others require 1.25x for non-warrantable properties. DSCR is calculated as: Annual NOI ÷ Annual Debt Payment. For a $280,000 refinance at 8% on a 30-year term, the annual debt service is about $24,700. To hit 1.20x DSCR, you’d need at least $29,640 in annual NOI ($2,470/month). If your projected rents don’t support that, you either need a lower refinance balance or higher rents — not achievable post-closing.
How do I calculate cash to close on a hard money deal?
Cash to close = Investor Equity (purchase + rehab − loan amount) + Points Cost + Closing/Origination Costs. For example: $360K project, 85% LTC loan = $306K loan. Investor equity = $54K. Add 2.5 points on $306K = $7,650. Add $8,000 closing costs. Cash to close = $69,650. Note that this is NOT total capital needed — it excludes monthly carry during the project (interest + holding costs) and any rehab funding gaps from the draw holdback schedule. Your real capital commitment is cash to completion, which is typically 30–50% higher than cash to close.
What is the 70% rule in real estate and does this tool use it?
The 70% rule states that an investor should pay no more than 70% of the ARV minus repair costs: MAO = (ARV × 0.70) − Rehab. It’s a quick filter, not a full underwrite. This analyzer calculates a more refined MAO by also subtracting estimated carry costs, points, and closing fees — producing a more conservative ceiling that accounts for the real cost of financing. On deals with high carry or large loan balances, the financing-adjusted MAO can be $15,000–$40,000 lower than the simple 70% rule estimate.
Can I use this calculator for BRRRR deals?
Yes. The Exit Analysis section is specifically designed for BRRRR underwriting. Enter your refinance APR, term (typically 360 months / 30 years), stabilized monthly rent or NOI, and target DSCR. The tool will calculate the estimated refi payment, check DSCR against your target, show the refi LTV, and estimate how much cash (if any) you’d need to bring in at refinance if the loan doesn’t fully cover the hard money payoff. The stress case models how a lower ARV (ARV Downside %) affects your refinance eligibility — critical for BRRRR deals where the refi is the exit strategy, not a sale.
How does a rehab overrun affect the hard money analysis?
A rehab overrun increases your total project cost — but your hard money loan is fixed at closing. The lender does not increase the loan to cover overruns. This means overrun costs are entirely out-of-pocket cash, directly reducing your sale profit dollar-for-dollar. A 15% overrun on a $90,000 rehab budget = $13,500 additional investor cash that wasn’t in the original plan. Combined with a delay (which adds interest carry and possibly an extension fee), overruns are the primary reason fixed-and-flip deals underperform projections. The stress case in this analyzer lets you model exactly this combined scenario.
Is the interest deductible on a hard money loan?
For investment properties (fix-and-flip or rental), hard money interest is generally tax-deductible as a business expense, either against the profit from the flip (Schedule C or pass-through entity) or as a rental property expense (Schedule E). For fix-and-flip properties, it is often capitalized into the basis and deducted against the gain on sale. Rules vary based on your entity structure, holding period, and whether the activity is classified as dealer/inventory vs. investment. Always consult a qualified CPA familiar with real estate investing before making tax decisions — this calculator does not model tax treatment.
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Related REI & Investment Property Calculators

Explore more tools on USFinanceCalculators.com to complete your deal underwriting, analyze hold strategies, and evaluate long-term returns on real estate investments.

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CFPB Compliance, Legal Disclaimer & Editorial Transparency

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Educational Use & Deal Math Methodology

Not Financial Advice

This Hard Money Deal Survival & Exit Analyzer is provided strictly for educational and estimation purposes only. It does not constitute — and must not be relied upon as — financial advice, investment advice, legal advice, tax advice, or any regulated financial service. No attorney-client, adviser-client, or fiduciary relationship is created by your use of this tool.

The calculations produced by this analyzer are simplified mathematical models based on general US real estate lending norms and publicly available market conventions. They do not account for:

  • Your specific lender’s draw schedule, holdback conditions, or prepayment terms
  • State-specific usury laws, licensing requirements, or real estate regulations
  • Actual appraisal or BPO outcomes on your specific property
  • Individual creditworthiness, entity structure, or borrower qualification factors
  • Market-timing risk, local economic conditions, or comps accuracy
  • IRS tax treatment of interest deductions, dealer status, or gain classification
  • Force majeure events, permitting delays, or material and labor shortages
  • Extension, default, or cross-default provisions in your loan agreement

ARV estimates, projected sale prices, rehab timelines, and interest calculations are illustrative projections — not guarantees of performance. Always obtain formal loan quotes from licensed hard money lenders, commission a licensed appraisal or BPO, and consult a qualified real estate attorney, Certified Public Accountant, and licensed investment advisor before making any financing or investment decision.

USFinanceCalculators.com is an independent educational website. We are not a lender, broker, real estate agent, or financial advisor. Use of this tool does not constitute a loan application, commitment to lend, or offer of any financial product. Past real estate investment returns do not guarantee future performance.

📋 Rate Benchmarks & Editorial Review Cycle

Last Reviewed: May 2026
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How We Build the Math

All financial formulas in this tool follow US standard conventions: interest-only monthly calculation (Annual Rate ÷ 12 × Outstanding Balance), DSCR per commercial lending norms (Annual NOI ÷ Annual Debt Service), and MAO per the real estate investor 70% rule — refined to subtract actual financing friction.

US-Standard Math
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Rate & Market Benchmarks

Default rate ranges, LTC/LTV limits, points norms, and DSCR thresholds referenced in the content sections are based on broadly observed hard money market conventions as of 2025–2026. They are not sourced from any single lender and will vary based on borrower profile, property type, and geography.

Market Estimates Only
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Content Review Cycle

Calculator logic, default values, threshold benchmarks, and educational content are reviewed periodically — typically when IRS guidance changes, when DSCR lending norms shift materially, or when hard money market conventions evolve. Tax figures (e.g., depreciation rules, capital gains rates) align with the current tax year.

Reviewed May 2026
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No Sponsored Results

The calculator outputs, verdict classifications (Refinance-Feasible, Capital Trap, etc.), and all content sections on this page are produced independently using our own formulas and editorial judgment. No lender, real estate platform, or financial institution pays to influence the tool’s outputs or recommendations.

Editorially Independent
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Found a calculation error, outdated rate assumption, or regulatory change we’ve missed? We take accuracy seriously. Please use our Contact page to report any issues. Verified corrections are reflected in the next content review cycle, with the review date updated at the top of this section.

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