Financing is the toolbox that unlocks real estate deals. Without it, even the best deal in the world stays on the table. This module walks through every financing option available to small and mighty investors — from government-backed mortgages and DSCR loans through private money, seller financing, and creative strategies — so you can match the right tool to the right deal in any market condition.
Financing is not a one-size-fits-all decision. The best financing for a house hacker buying a duplex with 3.5% down is different from the best financing for a seasoned investor buying their fifteenth rental property. The best financing for a fixer-upper project is different from the best financing for a turnkey rental. And the best financing available when interest rates are at 3% is different from the best available when rates are at 7%.
The experienced investor does not have just one financing option. They have a toolbox — and they know which tool to reach for based on the deal, the property type, their personal financial situation, and the current lending environment. The beginning investor typically has one or two options available. That is fine. The goal is to learn those one or two options thoroughly, use them to build momentum, and expand the toolbox over time.
Locking in your financing before you start making offers is one of the most important steps you can take. It transforms you from a window-shopper into a real buyer. Sellers and agents take you seriously. You can act quickly when a good deal appears. And you avoid the painful experience of finding a great deal, getting it under contract, and then discovering you cannot finance it. Get pre-approved first. Then start making offers.
Most investors start here — with the institutional loan programs that banks, mortgage brokers, and credit unions offer. These are the most structured, the most regulated, and the most predictable financing options. They also tend to offer the best interest rates and the longest fixed terms. Understanding each one — and knowing when it applies — is foundational knowledge for any investor.
FHA loans are insured by the federal government and designed to help lower-to-moderate income buyers get into homes. For investors, the value is in the low down payment requirement — as little as 3.5% — and the flexible credit requirements. You must live in the property (owner-occupied), which makes it the classic house hacking loan. Buy a duplex, triplex, or fourplex — live in one unit, rent the rest.
The trade-offs are ongoing mortgage insurance (MIP) for the life of the loan if you put less than 10% down, higher fees than conventional loans, and a slower approval process. You can only have one FHA loan at a time — but once you move out you can keep it as a rental and potentially get another FHA loan on your next home.
If you are eligible, the VA loan is arguably the single best mortgage program in existence for real estate investors using the house hacking strategy. Zero percent down payment. No mortgage insurance. Competitive interest rates. 30-year fixed available. The trade-offs are that you must live in the property, the VA appraisal process has strict property condition requirements, and there are upfront funding fees.
Like the FHA loan, you can move out later and keep the property as a rental. Many veterans have used consecutive VA loans to build a small portfolio — buying, living in, and then renting out properties over the course of a military career.
Conforming loans meet the standards of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac — the government-sponsored entities that buy most mortgages from lenders. For investors with strong credit scores and documented income (W2 employment or strong self-employment history), conforming mortgages offer the best combination of interest rates, loan terms, and availability. Owner-occupants can put as little as 3–5% down; investors typically need 15–25% down.
The key limitation is the loan count cap — you can get up to 10 conforming mortgages (sometimes called the "10 loan limit"). This becomes a ceiling for growing investors. Once you hit the limit, you graduate to DSCR loans, portfolio loans, or commercial financing.
DSCR loans qualify you based on the rental income of the property — not your personal W2 income or tax returns. The lender asks: does this property generate enough income to cover the mortgage payment? If the rent-to-payment ratio (the DSCR) meets their threshold (typically 1.0–1.25x or higher), you qualify regardless of what your personal income looks like. This makes DSCR loans a game-changer for self-employed investors, full-time investors without W2 income, and anyone who has hit the 10-loan conforming limit.
The trade-offs: interest rates run 0.5–1.5% higher than conforming loans, upfront fees are higher, down payments are typically 20–25%, and prepayment penalties are common for several years after closing. DSCR loans are also not ideal for fixer-uppers — you need to use a different loan to buy and renovate, then refinance with a DSCR loan once the property is stabilized and rented.
Portfolio lenders are local or regional banks that keep their loans on their own books rather than selling them to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Because they are lending their own money, they have more flexibility — they can lend on 5+ unit properties, fixer-uppers, commercial properties, and unusual situations that conforming lenders will not touch. They also build relationships with investors over time, which can be valuable as you grow.
The trade-offs are real: portfolio loans almost always have balloon payments or adjustable rates after 5–10 years (you will need to refinance or pay off the balance), shorter amortization periods (20–25 years instead of 30), and personal guarantees even if you are borrowing through an LLC. Build the relationship carefully — and be aware that if the loan officer retires or the bank is sold, your relationship goes with them.
Coach Carson and financing expert Bryan walk through DSCR loans in depth — what they are, how to qualify, common mistakes, prepayment penalties, and how to use them as part of the BRRRR strategy. Published May 2025 — the most current and comprehensive DSCR loan breakdown available from a trusted investor education source. Essential viewing for any investor approaching the conforming loan limit or working without traditional W2 income.
What DSCR loans are, how the debt service coverage ratio is calculated, qualifying without W2 income, DSCR loan benefits and drawbacks, prepayment penalties, refinancing strategy with DSCR, and how to use DSCR loans as part of the BRRRR buy-renovate-rent-refinance-repeat strategy. Directly reinforces Lesson 2 of this module.
Coach Carson · YouTube May 2025 · 56 min · Comprehensive
Bank loans are not the only path to buying real estate. For much of real estate investing history — before the standardized mortgage system existed — every real estate transaction involved some form of creative financing between buyer and seller. These tools still exist today and are sometimes more powerful than anything a bank can offer. They are especially valuable when you are just starting out with limited capital, when you have hit your loan limits, or when the property itself does not qualify for conventional financing.
Private money comes from individual investors — people who have cash in low-interest savings accounts or retirement funds and want to earn a better return by lending it to real estate investors. Because they are lending their own money, private lenders have complete flexibility. You negotiate everything: interest rate, loan term, payment schedule, collateral requirements, and prepayment terms. There is no standardized application process — it is a relationship transaction.
Private money has been the single most important financing source in Coach Carson's 20-year investing career. Finding private lenders takes time and trust-building — but once you have them, they become long-term partners who fund your deals faster and with fewer headaches than any institutional lender. Start by telling everyone you know that you pay interest to private lenders who invest passively with you. Someone who shows interest may be your first private lender.
Hard money lenders are businesses that make short-term loans — typically 6–18 months — secured by the property. They focus primarily on the value of the "hard asset" (the property) rather than on the borrower's creditworthiness. This makes them ideal for fixer-upper properties that do not qualify for bank loans, BRRRR strategy deals, and situations where you need to close quickly.
Hard money is significantly more expensive than other options — interest rates of 10–15% plus 2–4 origination points are common. They are designed to be short-term bridges: buy the property with hard money, renovate it, stabilize it as a rental, and then refinance with a long-term loan like a DSCR mortgage. Never use hard money as long-term financing. The carrying cost will eat your cash flow.
In seller financing, the property seller agrees to receive their equity over time — in monthly payments from you — rather than receiving all cash at closing. The seller becomes your lender. They hold a note secured by the property, just like a bank would. All terms are negotiable: interest rate (including 0% in some cases), down payment amount, payment schedule, and length of financing.
Seller financing is most likely to work with sellers who own their properties free and clear (or nearly so), who want passive income from the sale rather than a lump sum, or who are motivated to sell quickly without the hassle of a traditional sale. Retired landlords who no longer want to manage their properties are excellent candidates — they often have free-and-clear buildings and want to convert their equity into monthly income without a large tax bill from an outright sale.
A HELOC lets you borrow against the equity in your primary residence. Once established, you can draw funds by writing a check — instantly converting your home equity into investment capital without any additional loan application. You purchase the investment property with HELOC cash, own it debt-free, and then repay the HELOC from the property's cash flow or by refinancing the investment property with a long-term loan.
The key risks: if you cannot repay the HELOC, your home is at risk (this is secured by your residence, not just the investment property). HELOC interest rates are usually adjustable and can rise significantly. And lenders can freeze or cancel a HELOC during economic downturns — often exactly when you might need it most. Use a HELOC as a short-term funding tool, not long-term financing.
If you do not have enough cash to fund a deal, find a partner who does. You bring the deal, the knowledge, and the active management. They bring the capital and potentially the credit. You split the profits — typically 50/50. This is how many successful investors funded their first properties before they had capital of their own.
The best structure is a joint venture (JV) — one deal at a time, with clear written agreements about who does what and how profits are split. Avoid informal arrangements and handshake deals. Put everything in writing through an attorney. The best money partners are people you trust, who understand real estate, and who have more capital than they need sitting in low-yield accounts. They benefit from your deal-finding skills; you benefit from their capital. Both sides win.
Coach Carson and Michael Zuber discuss why seller financing remains one of the most powerful creative financing strategies for real estate investors — covering the fundamentals, how to negotiate price and terms, the competitive advantages it creates, and why motivated sellers are often more open to it than most investors expect. Published October 2023 — seller financing principles are fully evergreen.
Getting creative with no money, seller financing vs. traditional loans, benefits of seller financing, price and term negotiation, and the competitive advantage seller financing creates — particularly relevant in high-interest-rate environments when buyers and sellers are both motivated to find creative solutions. Directly reinforces Lesson 3 of this module.
Coach Carson · YouTube October 2023 · Evergreen content
One of the most common surprises for first-time investors is discovering how much cash a deal actually requires beyond the down payment. The down payment is the headline number — but there are four additional cash categories that most beginners underestimate or ignore entirely. Together they can add 25–60% to the cash you need on top of the down payment alone.
Debt is a power tool — it accelerates your ability to build a portfolio. But like any power tool, it can cause serious damage if used carelessly. The most common reason real estate investors fail is not bad deals or bad markets — it is debt problems. The following seven rules are a framework for using debt aggressively enough to build wealth while staying conservative enough to survive market downturns.
Set aside a minimum of $5,000 per property in a dedicated savings account. As your portfolio grows, graduate to 3–6 months of fixed expenses across all properties. This is your runway — the cushion that prevents one bad month from forcing desperate decisions.
A 30-year fixed mortgage at a rate you can afford is worth more than a lower-rate adjustable loan whose payments could reset at the worst possible time. Never take on short-term debt you cannot refinance or pay off quickly. The predictability of a fixed payment is itself a form of insurance.
A balloon payment is a large lump sum due at the end of a loan term — typically 5–10 years with portfolio loans. If you cannot refinance when the balloon comes due (because rates are high, your credit has changed, or the market has softened), you face a crisis. Know your exit before you take any balloon loan.
A property that does not cash flow requires you to subsidize it every month. If you are doing that across multiple properties, one income disruption can unravel everything. Appreciation is a bonus — never a plan. The property must be able to carry itself from rent income even in a flat market.
There is no universal rule for the right debt level — it is personal. Some investors are comfortable at 70% loan-to-value across their portfolio. Others sleep better at 40%. Know your own risk tolerance and set a personal debt ceiling. When you approach it, stop acquiring and start paying down — or at least wait until your reserves and cash flow support the next move.
Growing fast feels exciting. Growing too fast makes mistakes invisible until they are expensive. Set a limit on how many properties you acquire per year — especially early on. Give yourself time to stabilize each property, learn from it, and build reserves before adding the next one. Compounding works slowly at first. Trust the process.
There comes a time in every portfolio's life when the goal shifts from accumulation to stability. That is when you start paying off debt rather than reinvesting cash in new properties. A free-and-clear property generates dramatically more net income and carries no financing risk. The goal is not to be debt-free immediately — it is to have a plan for when debt reduction starts.
"Of all the people I've known in real estate investing who've failed and gone out of business, I can only think of people who had debt problems. Growing as fast as you can has its place — but being a risk mitigator means thinking about the best thing that could happen AND the worst thing that could happen. You can grow as much as you want if you give yourself a set of rules that you do not break."
| Loan Type | Down Payment | Qualifies On | Rate | Term | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FHA | 3.5% | Personal income + credit | Competitive | 30-yr fixed | House hackers, 1–4 units, must live in |
| VA | 0% | Military service + credit | Best available | 30-yr fixed | Veterans, house hacking, must live in |
| Conforming | 15–25% | Personal income + credit | Best for investors | 30-yr fixed | 1–4 units, up to 10 loans, strong credit |
| DSCR | 20–25% | Property rental income | +0.5–1.5% vs conforming | 30-yr fixed available | Beyond 10 loans, self-employed, no W2 |
| Portfolio | 20–30% | Personal + property | Competitive | 5–10 yr balloon | 5+ units, fixer-uppers, relationship lenders |
| Private Money | Negotiable | Relationship + deal quality | Negotiable | Negotiable | Fixer-uppers, speed, no bank needed |
| Hard Money | Varies | Property value (LTV) | 10–15%+ | 6–18 months | BRRRR, quick closings, fixer-uppers |
| Seller Financing | Negotiable | Seller approval | Negotiable (can be 0%) | Negotiable | Motivated sellers, free-and-clear properties |
| HELOC | None (uses home equity) | Home equity + personal income | Variable | Draw + repayment period | Short-term bridge, strong cash flow properties |
| Money Partner / JV | Little to none | Trust + deal quality | Profit split (50/50 typical) | Per deal | Beginners without capital, deal-finders |
Coach Carson — How to Get Easy Loans for Fixer Properties (Hard Money Explained)
A deep dive into hard money loans — how they work, what lenders look for, how to find hard money lenders, and how to use them as part of the BRRRR strategy. Particularly useful for investors targeting below-market fixer-upper properties that need short-term bridge financing before a long-term refinance.
Coach Carson — How to Buy Real Estate With Owner Financing (Seller Financing Full Walkthrough)
A step-by-step walkthrough of how to buy a property using seller financing — including how to find seller finance candidates, how to explain the benefits to a seller who has never heard of it, how to structure the paperwork, and a real deal example. The most comprehensive seller financing tutorial Coach Carson has produced.
5 questions — click your answer, then check all at once.
1. An investor is self-employed and has no W2 income. They own 8 rental properties and want to buy more. Which loan type is most appropriate for their next purchase?
2. An investor wants to buy a distressed property that needs $40,000 of repairs before it can be rented. The property will not qualify for a conventional mortgage in its current condition. What is the most appropriate financing approach?
3. A new investor wants to buy their first property with as little cash down as possible and is willing to live in the property. They have a credit score of 610 and no military service. What is their best financing option?
4. An investor is buying a $250,000 turnkey rental with a 20% down payment. They estimate $8,000 in closing costs, $5,000 in light repairs, 2 months of holding costs at $1,800/month, and want $5,000 in cash reserves. How much total cash do they need?
5. An investor with no capital of their own finds an excellent off-market deal — a duplex at 15% below market value. They know the numbers work but cannot fund the down payment. What creative financing solution fits best?