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Updated 3 months ago on . Most recent reply

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Angelo Mayorga
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Build, Rent, Refinance Strategy for New Construction Homes?

Angelo Mayorga
Posted

Hello everyone

I am a contractor in Florida. Over the years I have been able to obtain most of the major construction licenses including general contractor, plumbing, HVAC, electrical, and roofing. I have employees in all of these trades and we self perform the majority of the work on our new construction projects. The only trades I typically subcontract are cabinets, concrete, framing, and drywall since those tend to already be cheap in my market.

I have been building and selling homes this way for about two years now and it has gone well. Most of the homes I build are for clients, but I have also built a few for myself and sold them.

What I would like to do now is scale this and potentially keep some of the homes as rentals so I can start building a portfolio. Up to this point I have built most of the homes for myself using cash, but it ties up a lot of capital that I feel could be deployed more efficiently if I used financing.

For those of you doing new construction and holding properties, what types of loans or financing strategies have worked best for you? I have seen some people mention building the house and then doing a cash out refinance once it is completed, but I am not very familiar with the process.

Any advice or recommendations would be appreciated.

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Clark Thornton
  • Property Manager
  • Orlando, FL
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Clark Thornton
  • Property Manager
  • Orlando, FL
Replied

Great question. Use a construction loan to fund the build instead of cash. Rates are higher short-term, but it frees up your capital for the next project. Once the home is complete and you have a tenant in place, refinance into a DSCR loan. DSCR lenders qualify based on the rental income, not your personal income. When you do the DSCR refi, you may be able to do a cash-out and pull that equity back out to fund your next construction loan. Rinse and repeat.

Once you have a few properties built up, look into a portfolio DSCR loan. Instead of financing each property individually, you bundle them together under one loan. The bigger advantage is that portfolio DSCR loans can often be structured as non-recourse, meaning the lender can only come after the properties themselves if something goes wrong and not your personal assets. For someone scaling a portfolio, that's valuable protection. 

The key here is making sure the rent on the new-build will support a DSCR ratio of at least 1.2x before you break ground. 

I'm at a RE investment and property management firm in Central Florida. Feel free to message me directly if you'd like more advice along the way. 

  • Clark Thornton
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