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Posted 6 months ago

Why a Phase 1 Environmental Assessment Matters & What to Watch Out For

If you’re a real estate developer, rehabber, or commercial investor, you’ve likely heard of a Phase 1 Environmental Site Assessment (ESA). It’s not just a box to check—it’s a critical step that can save your deal or sink it fast. At Longhorn Funding, we’ve seen how this report shapes projects, especially for hard money borrowers racing against tight timelines.

A Phase 1 ESA is a deep dive into a property’s past to spot environmental risks—think old gas stations, chemical spills, or asbestos from a bygone factory. It’s not about testing soil yet (that’s Phase 2); it’s a historical review using records, site visits, and interviews. For about $1,500-$3,000, you get a clear picture of whether that fixer-upper or commercial lot hides a costly cleanup.

Why’s it useful? It protects your wallet and timeline. Say you’re flipping a $200,000 property. A clean Phase 1 keeps you on track; a red flag—like a buried oil tank—could mean $50,000 in remediation, killing your profit. Lenders like us often require it to ensure the collateral isn’t a liability. Plus, it’s your shield against CERCLA (Superfund) liability—without it, you could inherit the last owner’s mess.

But here’s where it trips folks up. Developers might skip it to save cash or time, only to find contamination mid-rehab—delaying permits or forcing a fire sale. Commercial guys buying old warehouses can get blindsided by industrial waste issues, turning a sweet deal sour. Even small rehabbers miss deadlines when lenders halt funding over an incomplete Phase 1. One client of ours lost weeks (and $10K) because a 1950s dry cleaner left solvent traces—caught too late.

The fix? Budget for it upfront and schedule it early. A clean Phase 1 keeps your project humming; a dirty one gives you leverage to renegotiate price or walk away. At Longhorn Funding, we’ve got your back—our loans factor in these realities so you’re not scrambling. Don’t let environmental ghosts haunt your next deal—get the Phase 1 done.



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