real estate investment loans

Iulia Cadar | July 10, 2025

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Understanding the Main Types of Real Estate Investment Loans

Real estate investment loans are a fundamental part of capitalizing and scaling commercial real estate portfolios. For fund managers and asset managers, understanding the particularities of different loan types and structures is critical to mitigating risks, maximizing returns and aligning financing with investment strategies. 

Here are the main types of real estate investment loans, along with the most common loan structures. 

Types of Loan Structures 

The structure of a real estate investment loan has a significant impact on cash flow, risk exposure, and investment flexibility. Understanding the particularities and benefits of each loan structure helps borrowers align financing with their project goals and capital needs. Below are four of the most common loan structures used in real estate finance. 

Fixed-Rate Loans 

Fixed-rate loans offer predictable debt service obligations over the life of the loan, as the interest rate remains constant regardless of market fluctuations. These loans are often preferred for core assets with long-term hold strategies, especially in low-rate environments. 

Variable-Rate Loans 

Unlike fixed-rate loans, variable-rate structures have interest rates tied to a benchmark, such as SOFR, which adjusts periodically. While they offer potential savings when rates are low, they expose borrowers to interest rate risk, making them suitable for value-add or opportunistic strategies where the investment horizon is shorter. 

Interest-Only Loans 

Interest-only structures allow borrowers to pay only the interest for an initial period before starting to repay the principal. This structure improves short-term cash flow and is often used in value-add or lease-up strategies. However, because the principal is not reduced during the interest-only period, refinance or exit risk must be carefully managed. 

Syndicated Loans 

Syndicated loans involve multiple lenders funding portions of a single loan coordinated by a lead lender. Common in large or complex transactions, this structure spreads risk and can offer access to greater capital than a single lender could provide. 

Types of Real Estate Investment Loans 

Senior Loan 

Senior loans are the primary and most secure form of financing in the capital stack. In a default scenario, senior lenders are repaid first before any subordinate financing or equity investors. Because they carry the lowest risk for lenders, they come with slightly lower interest rates for borrowers than subordinated or mezzanine loans. Senior debt is commonly used for stabilized, income-generating properties. 

Mezzanine Loans 

Mezzanine loans sit between senior debt and equity in the capital stack, offering lenders higher returns while posting greater risk. Unlike senior loans, they are usually secured by a pledge of equity rather than the property itself, allowing the lender to assume ownership if the borrower defaults. They are often used when senior loans don’t cover the full capital needs of a project. 

Bridge Loans 

Bridge loans are short-term financing tools used to cover temporary capital needs, such as rapid acquisitions or renovations, before securing permanent financing. Common in transitional or value-add projects, they typically last six months to three years and are often interest-only with high rates. While more expensive than long-term loans, these loans offer the advantage of speed and flexibility in underwriting. 

Construction Loans 

Construction loans are short-term, interest-only loans used to finance the development or major renovation of a property. These loans are typically disbursed in stages based on construction progress and verified by lender inspections. Once the project is completed and stabilized, construction loans are usually refinanced with a permanent loan. These loans are suited for developers needing flexible funding tied directly to project progress. However, borrowers face risks if cost overruns or delays prevent timely conversion to permanent financing. 

Permanent Loans 

Permanent loans are used to refinance a property once it is fully constructed, leased, and generating stable income. They often replace short-term construction or bridge loans and typically feature fixed interest rates, amortization over 20–30 years, and lower risk for both lenders and borrowers.  

CMBS Loans 

Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS) loans are structures bundled with similar loans, securitized, and sold to investors as bonds. They are typically fixed-rate, non-recourse loans used for stabilized commercial properties. For borrowers, the advantage is access to large-scale, long-term, and competitively priced capital. However, they come with rigid structures, high minimum loan sizes and limited flexibility for refinancing, restructuring, or early repayment.  

Agency Loans 

Agency loans are government-sponsored or insured financing options offered through Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or HUD, primarily for multifamily properties. They provide competitive rates and long-term amortization, making them attractive to institutional investors and developers, but they require strict compliance with underwriting, eligibility and ongoing reporting standards. 

Credit Facilities 

Credit facilities are flexible revolving lines of credit secured by asset portfolios or backed with corporate guarantees in REITs or fund structures. Used by real estate firms and funds, they allow borrowers to draw, repay, and re-borrow funds as needed. They are commonly used for acquisitions, capital projects, or liquidity management. Credit facilities are particularly valuable for active investment firms and REITs managing multiple transactions across complex portfolios. 

How Yardi Debt Manager Helps 

Each real estate investment loan comes with its own terms, structure and risk implications. Yardi Debt Manager, part of the Yardi Investment Suite, helps firms gain full transparency into their debt portfolio with a complete system that allows users to track and account for different types of loans, both from a borrower and a lender perspective. 

The platform provides all necessary functions to calculate accurate amortization schedules for simple and complex loans, track collateral, and manage critical dates and covenants. Additionally, the tool integrates with Yardi Voyager, connecting loans to their real estate collateral and providing a complete view of the company’s debt portfolio.    


Efficient debt management and full visibility into loan terms and structures are critical to portfolio success. Tools like Yardi Debt Manager help firms navigate complex debt structures, mitigate risk and make informed, strategic decisions across their real estate investments. 

Iulia Cadar

Iulia is a writer for Yardi Investment Suite, focusing on commercial real estate and the technology shaping the industry. She covers investment trends, market dynamics and the evolving role of software in real estate operations. With extensive experience in B2B marketing for the software sector, she delivers insightful, research-driven content for real estate professionals.

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