A practical framework for evaluating any real estate loan before you commit, from the founder of Coventry Enterprises LLC.
After years of reviewing real estate loans, loan documents, and investment deal structures, I've identified a consistent set of questions that borrowers should be asking before they sign any real estate financing. These aren't complicated questions. They're the ones that consistently reveal where a loan carries more risk than the rate page suggests.
This framework applies whether you're looking at a residential mortgage, a commercial acquisition loan, a hard money deal for a renovation project, or a construction loan for ground-up development. The specific terms change by loan type, but the evaluation logic is the same.
The first thing I do when reviewing any loan is calculate the total cost of capital over the expected hold period. This is not the interest rate. This is the rate plus origination points plus all fees, divided by the loan amount, expressed as an annualized percentage of what you're actually paying for the money.
For a hard money loan at 12% with 3 origination points held for 15 months, the total cost per dollar borrowed is significantly higher than 12%. If you add origination fees, inspection fees, and any other charges, you may be looking at an effective rate of 16-18% when all costs are included. That number changes how you evaluate the deal's economics compared to looking at the stated rate alone.
Write out every fee the lender charges. Assign a dollar value to each one. Add them to the total interest over your hold period. Divide by the loan amount and annualize it. That number is what the capital actually costs you. Build your deal economics around that number, not the quoted rate.
For any loan where the payment can change, model what the worst-case payment is and when it can arrive. For adjustable rate mortgages, this means taking the initial rate and adding the maximum adjustment cap in the first reset period. For loans with balloon terms, it means modeling the refinancing payment at maturity under rates 2-3% higher than today. For interest-only loans, it means calculating the fully amortizing payment when the interest-only period ends.
Then ask whether you can sustain the worst-case payment from your income or property cash flow. Not comfortably. Just sustain. If the honest answer is no, that loan carries payment shock risk that may eventually produce default. The question is whether you accept that risk knowingly or walk away from a loan that doesn't fit your financial reality.
Most borrowers read the rate, the payment, and the term. Almost no borrowers read the full default section. That section defines what you're agreeing to in the scenario where things go wrong, which is precisely when the terms matter most.
Look for: how default is defined beyond payment failure, what the cure period is after a default event, what the lender can do in a default situation, what the default interest rate is, and whether there are any provisions that limit the lender's remedies. In many commercial and hard money loan documents, the lender's rights in default are extremely broad, and the borrower's cure window is extremely short.
Understanding the full default mechanism before closing is essential for any commercial or investment loan. It tells you exactly what your exposure is if the deal goes sideways.
Before accepting any loan with a defined term, write down your exit strategy in concrete terms. Not "we'll refinance" but "we will refinance at maturity by qualifying for a [specific loan type] with [specific lender] at [specific rate range] based on the property's projected income of [specific dollar amount] and value of [specific dollar amount]."
Then stress test that exit. What if the projected income is 15% lower? What if rates are 2% higher? What if the property value is 10% below projection? Does the exit still work? If it only works under your base case assumptions, you are accepting the risk that a foreseeable market change strands you in a loan you cannot exit.
Every short-term loan needs a documented exit that holds up under realistic stress. This is not optional. It's the single most important piece of planning for any term loan on a real estate investment.
Before you close any real estate loan, confirm what your reserve position will be after closing. Down payment, closing costs, prepaid escrows, and initial expenses often consume capital that borrowers intended to hold as reserves. If you're closing with less than 6 months of debt service in accessible liquid reserves for an income property, you are underfunded relative to what the investment requires.
For construction projects, the reserve calculation is different but equally critical. You need your contingency reserve funded and intact at closing. If the loan structure requires you to contribute contingency reserves from your own funds before draws begin, make sure that capital is available and earmarked before you commit to the loan.
Run through this checklist before signing any significant real estate loan:
Any of these items present means slowing down, asking questions, and getting clear written answers before proceeding. Not every red flag is a deal-killer. But none of them should be ignored.
The final step in safer real estate financing is having someone with no stake in the transaction review the loan documents before you sign. Not the loan officer, not your broker, not the lender's attorney. Someone who is being paid to assess the loan in your interest and has no financial incentive in whether you take it or walk away.
This is the service that Coventry Enterprises LLC provides. An independent review identifies the terms that carry material risk, explains them in plain language, and gives you the information you need to make an informed decision. You may still take the loan. You may negotiate specific terms. You may walk away. But you do it with a full understanding of what you're agreeing to, rather than hoping that the front page tells the whole story.
For more on specific loan risks, explore the educational resources on our site: the toxic lending overview, the bad loan types guide, and the detailed coverage of construction loan risks, hard money dangers, and commercial loan pitfalls. This information exists because borrowers who understand what they're looking at make better decisions. That's the entire point.