The fix-and-flip market is back on the move — but not in the way that made it easy money in 2020 and 2021.
Heading into 2026, 71% of flippers expect to purchase more properties than last year — the highest share in the survey’s four-year history. Loan activity is growing, institutional capital is flowing back, and borrowing costs have started to ease from their 2024 peaks.
But the investors getting burned are the ones who think the current market operates like the last one. It doesn’t.
Here are five things you need to understand about fix-and-flip loans in 2026 before you put the next deal under contract.
1. Lender Underwriting Has Tightened — And Your Deal Has to Prove Itself
The Easy Money Era Is Over
In the frenzied years of 2020–2022, some lenders were approving deals on thin information and letting inflated ARVs carry the underwriting. That approach has corrected. Today, private and hard money lenders are applying what the industry is calling “hybrid underwriting” — a model that combines the traditional asset-based evaluation with a closer look at deal viability, borrower track record, and project feasibility.
What that means for you: your package needs to be tighter.
What Lenders Are Looking At Now
- A detailed, itemized rehab budget — line-item scopes with contractor backing carry far more weight than ballpark estimates
- Defensible comps — ARV needs support from recent closed sales, not aspirational comps from a different price tier
- A clear exit strategy — selling, refinancing to a rental, or both? Lenders want to see you’ve thought through the exit before finalizing the entry
- Experience documentation — a track record of completed projects is increasingly one of the most valuable things you bring to the table
Tighter underwriting is not the enemy. It filters out bad deals — including ones that would have cost you your margin even if the lender had approved them.
2. Speed Still Matters — Fast Closings Win Deals
The Competitive Edge Hasn’t Changed
Distressed and under-market inventory doesn’t wait for slow lenders. Off-market deals, wholesaler assignments, and auction purchases move fast. A seller who takes a slightly lower offer from a buyer closing in 10 days over a higher offer that needs 45 days is making a rational decision. Speed is leverage.
What to Look for in a Lender’s Timeline
Top private lenders approve deals in 24–48 hours and close in 7–14 days for borrowers with an established relationship and a clean package. That’s impossible with conventional financing.
When evaluating a lender, ask directly: what is your average time from application to clear-to-close? If they can’t give you a specific answer, that tells you something.
3. Experience Is Being Rewarded — Lenders Are Favoring Repeat Borrowers
Your Track Record Is Now a Financial Asset
Lenders are differentiating sharply between first-time flippers and investors with a documented track record. The difference shows up in loan terms:
- Experienced investors can access loan-to-cost ratios up to 90–95%, versus 75–80% for newer borrowers
- ARV caps favor proven investors — up to 75% ARV for experienced borrowers versus 65% for first-timers
- Rate pricing reflects experience; a repeat borrower may access meaningfully better pricing on the same deal
How to Build Your Track Record Intentionally
The strategy is simple: close deals, document everything, and build a relationship with a lender who tracks your progress. Jumping lenders for a fraction of a point costs you the relationship equity that translates to better terms and faster approvals over time.
4. The Cost of Capital Has Shifted — Here’s How to Think About Rates in 2026
The Rate Environment Has Improved, But Not Returned to the Floor
Rates peaked in 2023–2024 and have been declining. Average bridge loan rates fell from 11.1% in September 2024 to 10.43% by September 2025. Heading into 2026, private lenders are generally ranging from 9% to 12%, with stronger deals and more experienced borrowers landing at the lower end.
Higher than the all-time lows investors got used to — but workable when deals are underwritten correctly.
The Right Way to Underwrite Your Cost of Capital
Don’t treat the interest rate as your only cost of capital. Your true all-in cost includes origination points (typically 1–3% upfront), monthly interest on the committed loan balance, extension fees if the project runs long, and the opportunity cost of your equity at closing.
On a $455,000 loan at 11%, you’re looking at roughly $4,100 per month before fees. Build that into your model from day one. Stress-test against a 30-day extension. If the deal works, move. If it only works on a perfect timeline, it carries more risk than it appears.
5. Your Lender Should Be a Partner, Not Just a Check — What to Look For
The Difference Between a Transactional Lender and a Strategic Partner
At its worst, private lending is purely transactional: you bring a deal, they fund it, they collect interest, everyone moves on. But investors who consistently scale tend to work with lenders who bring more than capital.
A lender who has funded hundreds of fix-and-flip deals has seen the mistakes you’re about to make — before you make them. They know what a realistic rehab budget looks like. They know when an ARV is wishful thinking. That knowledge, available in a phone call before you go under contract, is worth more than a quarter-point difference in rate.
What to Look For When Evaluating a Lending Partner
- Real estate experience — do they understand the mechanics of a flip, not just the mechanics of a loan?
- Responsive communication — can you reach someone who knows your deal mid-project?
- Transparent pricing — all fees disclosed upfront, no surprises at the closing table
- Flexible draw schedules — draws funded based on completed work, not arbitrary timelines
- Willingness to problem-solve — if your project runs long, do they work with you or move toward default rates?
In an operator’s market, the right lending relationship is a genuine competitive advantage.
Ready to Move on Your Next Deal?
Davis Legacy Ventures specializes in fix-and-flip financing for investors serious about execution. Jonathan K. Davis — “The Mortgage Vet,” U.S. Army Veteran with 15+ years in private lending — brings real deal experience to every loan.
Fast approvals. Transparent terms. A lender who understands what you’re building.
Schedule a call or apply at davislegacyventures.com.


