Institutional-Grade Deal Packaging for Commercial Real Estate Loan Brokers

Bridge & Transitional Capital

Bridge & Transitional Capital

Bridge & Transitional Capital: Moving on Opportunities Before the Window Closes


“Short-term capital designed to acquire, reposition, and stabilize assets before long-term financing.” 


In real estate, the best deals don’t wait.

They require speed, certainty, and execution.

That’s where bridge capital comes in.


What This Actually Is

Bridge financing is short-term capital designed to move quickly—typically used to:

  • Acquire a property
  • Fund renovations or repositioning
  • Stabilize an asset before long-term financing

It’s not meant to be permanent.

It’s meant to create leverage during a transition.


What Lenders Are Actually Looking At

Forget the buzzwords.

Bridge lenders care about three things:

  • The asset
  • The plan
  • The exit

If those are clear and supported, deals move fast.
If they’re not, speed disappears quickly.


Where This Works Best

This type of capital is commonly used for:

  • Value-add acquisitions
  • Fix-and-flip or rehab projects
  • Transitional or underperforming assets
  • Time-sensitive opportunities where banks are too slow

It’s built for situations where timing matters more than perfection.


Speed Comes from Clarity

Yes—these deals can close quickly.


But not because they’re “easy.”

Because they’re clean and well-positioned upfront.

When the file is right:

  • Approvals happen faster
  • Terms become more competitive
  • Execution becomes predictable

Typical Structure (Context, Not a Pitch)

  • Loan-to-Value: up to ~75–80% of purchase
  • Rehab funding: often included
  • Terms: typically 12–24 months
  • Property types: residential investment + commercial

These are guidelines.

The strength of the deal always drives the structure.


Where MCS Capital Fits

We don’t just “place” bridge loans.

We look at:

  • Whether the deal actually supports the ask
  • How the business plan needs to be framed
  • What the realistic exit is (sale, refinance, stabilization)
  • Which lenders will actually execute—not just quote

Then we position the deal so it closes.


Bottom Line

Bridge capital isn’t expensive.

Badly structured bridge capital is.

Used correctly, it allows you to move faster than the market.
Used incorrectly, it creates pressure you can’t outgrow.


FAQ


What is a bridge (hard money) loan?
Short-term, asset-backed financing used to acquire or reposition real estate quickly.

Why are rates higher than banks?
Because speed, flexibility, and asset-based underwriting come with more risk to the lender.


How fast can these close?
When the deal is clean, timelines are often measured in weeks—not months.

Do I need perfect credit?
Not necessarily. The focus is primarily on the asset and the execution plan.

What’s the exit strategy?
Typically refinance into long-term debt or sell the property after improvements.


Is this long-term financing?
No. It’s a bridge—meant to move you from acquisition to stabilization.


"What comes next" 

Most bridge capital is just the first step.

The real objective is transitioning into long-term, stable financing once the asset is positioned correctly.


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If you are evaluating a financing opportunity or preparing a transaction for the capital markets, MCS Capital can help you assess the capital strategy and determine next steps.

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