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When a Private Mortgage Is the Cheapest Option (Investor)

by | February 7, 2026

… When High-Interest Money Is the Cheapest Capital an Investor Can Use

Let’s not sugarcoat it: private mortgages are expensive.

Not just the interest rate — which can easily run 10–14% — but the entire cost stack around them. Lender fees. Broker fees. Appraisals with tighter scrutiny. Legal costs. Sometimes minimum interest periods. On paper, private money looks like something you avoid at all costs.

And most of the time, you should.

But real estate investing isn’t about optics — it’s about outcomes. And in certain residential investment scenarios, private mortgages can actually be the cheapest capital available, even with a double-digit rate.

Why? Because time, speed, and missed opportunity have a cost, and that cost often dwarfs interest.

Topics I’ll Cover in This Article:

The Real Cost of a Private Mortgage for Investors

Fix-and-Flip Projects with Short Holding Periods

Buying Undervalued or Distressed Properties

Bridge Loans for Investment Properties and BRRR Strategies

A Real-World Investor Story: Expensive Money, Bigger Profit

How Investors Can Use This Knowledge in Practice

How I Help Investors Use Private Capital Strategically

The Real Cost of a Private Mortgage for Investors

Before we talk about why private money can be cheaper, you need to understand what you’re actually paying for.

A typical private investment mortgage may include:

  • Interest in the 10–14% range
  • Lender fees of 2–5%
  • Broker fees of 1–3%
  • Appraisal and legal costs that exceed bank norms

That’s real money. No argument there.

But here’s the key reframing:

Private mortgages aren’t priced for affordability — they’re priced for speed and certainty.

For investors, that speed is often where the profit lives.

Fix-and-Flip Projects with Short Holding Periods

This is the classic use case where private money shines.

In a flip, the plan is simple:

  • Buy
  • Renovate
  • Sell
  • Exit

You’re not holding the mortgage for five years. You’re holding it for months.

If you’re in a flip for six months, paying 12% annual interest is effectively a 6% cost, plus fees — and that cost is usually baked into the project pro forma from day one.

Now compare that to the alternative:

  • Bank underwriting takes weeks
  • The property needs repairs the bank won’t tolerate
  • The seller won’t wait
  • Another investor steps in

The opportunity cost of waiting isn’t a higher rate — it’s losing the deal entirely.

Private lenders focus on after-repair value, not the current mess. They can fund in 7–10 days, often with interest-only payments and fully open terms. That means you pay them off the moment the property sells, without punitive penalties.

In this context, the private mortgage isn’t “expensive money.”
It’s a project cost, like lumber or labour — and one that’s often dwarfed by the upside once the renovation is complete.

Buying Undervalued or Distressed Properties

Discounted properties rarely wait for perfect financing.

Estate sales. Power-of-sale listings. Auctions. Properties with deferred maintenance. Rural homes. Empty duplexes. These deals often fall outside bank lending criteria, even when the numbers make sense.

Private lenders don’t care if the property needs work or doesn’t fit a neat box. They lend on asset value and exit strategy.

Let’s say an investor can buy a property $50,000 below market because the seller wants certainty and speed. Waiting for bank financing — or waiting until the property qualifies for bank standards — almost guarantees the deal disappears.

In that case, paying private interest for a few months is trivial compared to:

  • Immediate equity captured
  • Future appreciation
  • Rental or resale upside

Missed opportunity is the real expense here. And it’s invisible — which is why so many investors underestimate it.

Bridge Loans for Investment Properties and BRRR Strategies

Investors scaling portfolios rarely operate in a neat, linear fashion.

You might:

  • Have equity tied up in another property
  • Be mid-refinance
  • Be waiting on a partner’s capital
  • See a deal before your capital stack is ready

Private bridge financing lets you act first and optimize later.

This is especially common in BRRR strategies — Buy, Renovate, Rent, Refinance, Repeat.

Private money gets you:

  • Into the deal quickly
  • Through renovations
  • To stabilized rent and improved value

Once the property is clean, rented, and appraised higher, you refinance into cheaper bank or alternative financing and exit the private loan.

Yes, the carrying cost for 6–12 months is higher. But that cost is weighed against after-repair value, not original purchase price. In many cases, private lenders will even lend against ARV, funding part of the renovation because they understand the endgame.

The alternative — waiting to save more cash or get pre-approved — slows momentum and often means missing growth cycles entirely.

For active investors, inertia is expensive.

A Real-World Investor Story: Expensive Money, Bigger Profit

An investor finds a rundown duplex with huge upside. Vacant. Needs work. Seller wants a firm closing in ten days.

Banks won’t touch it. Too rough. Too fast.

The investor uses a private mortgage. The costs sting — no doubt. But six months later:

  • Renovations are done
  • Units are rented
  • The property appraises significantly higher

They refinance into long-term financing and walk away with equity and cash flow.

Had they waited for “cheap” money, someone else would own that duplex today.

How Investors Can Use This Knowledge in Practice

For investors, the question shouldn’t be:

“What’s the cheapest rate?”

It should be:

“What’s the cheapest outcome?”

Private mortgages make sense when:

  • The deal is time-sensitive
  • The property doesn’t fit bank rules yet
  • Value creation is imminent
  • The exit is clear and realistic

Used this way, private money is a tool, not a crutch.

How I Help Investors Use Private Capital Strategically

My job isn’t to sell private mortgages. It’s to make sure you only use them when they make financial sense.

That means:

  • Stress-testing the deal economics
  • Keeping the term as short as possible
  • Controlling fees
  • Structuring the exit before you enter
  • Coordinating the refinance path early

Private capital should accelerate your strategy — not eat it alive.

Allen’s Final Thoughts

Private mortgages are expensive for a reason. They’re not designed for comfort — they’re designed for speed, certainty, and flexibility.

For residential real estate investors, there are moments when those three things are worth far more than a low rate.

Used carelessly, private money destroys returns.
Used intentionally, it creates opportunities that cheaper financing can’t touch.

The goal is never to stay in private capital.
The goal is to use it briefly, deliberately, and exit stronger than you entered.

And when you’re deciding whether a deal justifies “expensive money,” that’s exactly the conversation I’m here to help you navigate.

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Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert is a licensed mortgage agent. He has four university degrees, including two Masters degrees, and specializes in real estate finance, development, and investing. Allen Ehlert has decades of independent consulting experience for companies and governments, including the Ontario Real Estate Association, Deloitte, City of Toronto, Enbridge, and the Ministry of Finance.

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