Two investors walk into your office seeking fix-and-flip financing for the same $300,000 property with a $75,000 renovation budget. One has done 12 successful flips in the last three years, while the other is working on their first deal.
In today's market, repeat investors are evaluated considerably differently for fix-and-flip loans than first-time borrowers. From a lending perspective, it would be a mistake to provide them with the same loan terms.
Fix-and-flip investors still play a vital role in delivering renovated housing to the undersupplied market. In 2025, however, ATTOM data showed that average gross returns fell to about 25%, and average flip earnings fell to the mid-$60,000 area, down from previous years. At the same time, in many big cities, homes stayed on the market for more than 70 days.
In 2026, fix-and-flip lenders prioritize:
Lenders can lower their risk by looking at the borrower's past, especially in regions with high interest rates.
Loan-to-cost and ARV leverage are no longer the same for everyone. Most fix-and-flip lenders will follow conservative guidelines based on experience:
Lenders will also classify rehab projects by complexity:
Investors who have a good track record can get more aggressive financing for moderate and heavy rehabs. Borrowers who don't have a lot of experience should start with smaller, simpler projects.
Fix-and-flip financing in high-interest-rate environments depends on conservative valuation.
Across most programs:
Execution certainty now outweighs appreciation assumptions.
When assessing novice clients for fix-and-flip financing, you need to be particularly careful. Important elements for pre-qualification include:
Financial Capacity Assessment:
Knowledge Evaluation:
Project Scope Matching:
The best broker-client relationships are those in which investors do 2-3 flips every year (or more) for several years. To maintain these partnerships, you need to be strategic:
Proactive Communication:
Performance Recognition:
Portfolio Perspective:
Structured Progression Path:
Every successful flip gives the broker and investor a chance to strengthen loan terms and build a stronger partnership.
While experience is critical, every deal must still meet baseline underwriting standards.
Deals often don't turn out well when they depend on high prices, budgets that haven't been checked, or inexperienced borrowers attempting complicated rehabs.
From 2023 to 2025, margins got smaller and holding costs went up. The market seems like it's stabilizing in 2026, but underwriting is still conservative. Here are current conditions affecting today’s fix-and-flip market:
Investors who are disciplined and have a proven track record can secure more favorable terms, while deals that aren't well-structured run into problems.
RCN Capital has made more than 37,000 business-purpose loans worth over $8.2 billion since 2010. This gives us the consistency and experience needed for creating long-term partnerships with brokers and clients. RCN Capital’s fix-and-flip loans are based on how financing work in the real world. Our ARV programs are designed to:
Visit RCN Capital's loan programs page to see how our programs can empower you to help fix-and-flip clients at every step of their journey.