Experienced investors often have large portfolios that include multiple rental properties. As a portfolio grows, traditional financing structures can become inefficient, making it harder to scale. For brokers, understanding how to position financing for diverse portfolios allows you to move beyond one-time deals and step into a more strategic role: helping clients structure smarter, more scalable portfolios.
Investors who own five or more properties have to deal with an increasing amount of paperwork. A study found that portfolio loans made up 31.5% of new mortgages in the third quarter of 2024, up from less than 25% in 2022. This shift reflects a clear trend: fragmented loan structures don’t scale.
For your clients, this is what fragmentation really looks like:
Financing one or two investment properties is often straightforward. But as investors add more properties, managing financing across a portfolio can become significantly more complicated.
Each property financed separately has its own loan terms, interest rate, payment schedule, maturity date, and underwriting requirements. Over time, this can create operational challenges that make growing a portfolio harder to do efficiently.
Traditional loan structures can also make it difficult to refinance multiple assets. An investor may have strong-performing properties with substantial equity, but that strength is often evaluated one property at a time rather than at the portfolio level.
This is where portfolio lending can offer a different approach. Rather than viewing each asset in isolation, portfolio loans can evaluate the broader strength of an investor’s holdings, including cash flow, equity position, and overall portfolio performance.
Potential advantages of this approach may include:
More Efficient Financing Management
Greater Flexibility
Scalable Underwriting
As property count increases, financing often becomes less about individual transactions and more about building a structure that supports scale. This is where portfolio loans can become a valuable tool for investors and an important solution for brokers to understand.
A rental portfolio loan combines several properties into a single loan structure.
Key advantages include:
Brokers who understand how to position portfolio loans can create more value for clients while strengthening their own lending business. As investors grow beyond traditional financing structures, brokers who can introduce strategic financing solutions move beyond one-time transactions, often becoming long-term partners.
Portfolio lending can create several advantages for brokers:
Portfolio loans are larger by nature, increasing commission potential.
You position yourself as a long-term financing partner across the investor’s growth cycle.
Not all brokers offer structured products like portfolio loans. This help you stand out in a crowded financing marketplace.
You are solving real-world problems for investors, helping them with:
As investors grow beyond a handful of properties, portfolio loans become even more important. Brokers who identify this issue early, and introduce the solution before pain points escalate, stand out immediately.
Look for these signs when talking to clients:
Three or more mortgaged rentals. This is where investors should start to consider portfolio loan structures. The justification for them only gets stronger as the count goes up.
Complaints about loan management. If a client talks about having to keep track of several payments, different due dates, or terms throughout their portfolio, that's your cue to have the portfolio loan conversation.
Stalled acquisition plans. Portfolio loans are the solution for when a client says they can't receive another loan because a bank has put a limit on how many properties they can finance.
Desire to pull equity across multiple properties. When you refinance a property, you can only access that specific property's equity. A portfolio loan lets an investor tap into the equity they've built up in several properties at once, which is a much more effective way to finance new acquisitions.
When talking to clients who have never utilized portfolio loans, you’ll often encounter hesitation. Knowing how to reassure these clients makes you more than just a source of financing; it positions you a strategic advisor.
"Why not just keep separate loans?" Individual loans operate best on a smaller scale. As portfolios get bigger, it gets harder to manage them. One payment, one rate, and one lender relationship significantly simplifies operations.
"What if I want to sell one property?" Most portfolio loan structures have release clauses that let you sell individual properties as long as certain conditions are met. These conditions usually have to do with keeping the portfolio's minimum value or DSCR following the release. It's a good idea to check with the lender ahead of time, but it's not the type of strict limit that your clients may think it is.
"Isn't bundling riskier?" In fact, fragmented financing has its own concerns, such as staggered maturities, different rate exposures, and the operational difficulty of dealing with many servicers. Portfolio financing combines those factors, which often lowers risk for a portfolio that is performing well.
Strong preparation on the broker's part shortens the time it takes to close deals, and shows the lender your expertise. Get the following items ready for portfolio submissions:
Property data tape: A summary of all the properties in the portfolio, including their address, number of units, current rent, occupancy status, and estimated value.
12-month rent rolls: Current rent rolls for properties that are rented out and Form 1007 rental appraisals for properties that are not rented out. This helps with rental income-based underwriting.
Entity documents: Most experienced investors own real estate through LLCs. Before you send in your client’s operational agreements and entity formation documents, make sure they are in order.
Current bank statements: Lenders look at the portfolio's liquidity and reserves as a whole. It's typically required that borrowers maintain two to three months of expenses in reserve.
A clear statement of what the investor is optimizing for: Rate? Leverage? Term flexibility? This ensures lenders structure proposals that are aligned with the client’s goals—not generic options.
RCN Capital offers financing options for complex investor portfolios with a broker-first approach. Some of the main benefits include:
Through our diverse offerings, RCN Capital enables brokers to deliver solutions that align with investor growth strategies and help you close more deals. Check out RCN Capital's broker page to learn how partnering with us empowers you to grow your lending business.