Can Private Lenders Finance Vacant or Under-Renovation Properties?

Can Private Lenders Finance Vacant or Under-Renovation Properties?

Vacant homes and properties under renovation are common in Alberta, especially for investors, builders, and homeowners mid-transition. Unfortunately, these are also the exact scenarios where banks often say no.

A bank decline does not automatically mean the deal is bad. It usually means the property no longer fits a rigid lending box. This is where private lenders often step in.

Why banks say no to vacant or under-renovation properties

Banks are designed to lend against finished, occupied, and predictable properties. When a home is vacant or mid-renovation, several red flags appear in their underwriting.

  • No rental income or owner occupancy
  • Increased insurance and risk concerns
  • Unfinished or non-habitable condition
  • Uncertainty around timelines and completion

Even strong borrowers are often declined simply because the property itself does not meet bank policy at that moment in time.

How private lenders look at these properties differently

Private lenders are not focused on checkbox lending. Their primary concern is equity, downside protection, and a clear plan.

  • As-is and after-repair property value
  • Available equity
  • Scope and timeline of renovations
  • Exit strategy once work is complete

This allows financing to move forward even while the property is incomplete.

Financing properties during renovation phases

Renovation periods are temporary by nature. Private lenders understand this and structure loans accordingly.

  • Short-term financing aligned with renovation timelines
  • Funds used to complete or stabilize the property
  • Focus on the finished outcome, not the current disruption

Once the renovation is complete and the property is occupied or stabilized, traditional financing options often reopen.

Example: financing a vacant or under-renovation property

In a common situation, a property is vacant while renovations are underway. The bank will not finance it until work is complete.

A private lender provides short-term financing to:

  • Hold the property during renovations
  • Complete required improvements
  • Create time to stabilize occupancy or value

Once the property is finished, longer-term financing or a sale becomes possible.

When private financing makes sense

  • The property is temporarily vacant
  • Renovations make the home non-habitable
  • Timing matters more than rigid rules
  • You have a clear completion or exit plan

Important considerations before moving forward

Financing a property mid-transition requires clarity and planning.

  • Realistic renovation timelines
  • Accurate budgets and contingency planning
  • Defined plan for refinance, sale, or occupancy

Trusted resources in Alberta

Financing properties banks are not built for

Vacant and under-renovation properties are part of real estate investing and life transitions. The right financing keeps projects moving instead of forcing premature decisions.

At NOW Mortgage, we help Alberta homeowners and investors structure private financing that fits real-world property conditions.

Book a confidential review

Call 587-200-6727 or email lending@nowmtg.ca