Real Estate Finance

Commercial LTV vs. LTC Reconciler

Identify your primary borrowing constraint and determine maximum loan proceeds before you reach the closing table.

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LTV vs. LTC Reconciler
Identify the binding borrowing constraint on your deal
Current market value or negotiated acquisition price of the asset
Total hard + soft costs to bring the asset to stabilization
About LTV vs. LTC
Why do lenders set both LTV and LTC limits?
Lenders apply dual constraints because they protect against two distinct risks simultaneously. LTV guards against asset depreciation — if the property value falls, they need sufficient equity cushion to recover the loan balance. LTC guards against construction cost overruns and under-capitalized sponsors. Both must be satisfied; the lower dollar figure binds.
What happens when LTV is the binding constraint?
When LTV limits the deal, the appraised value or purchase price is the ceiling — not your total project budget. The lender is effectively saying: "We'll lend X% of what the asset is worth today, period." To unlock more proceeds, you need either a higher purchase price justification, a pre-stabilized value appraisal, or additional equity. Bridge or construction lenders sometimes underwrite to "as-complete" value, which can shift the binding constraint from LTV to LTC.
What happens when LTC is the binding constraint?
When total project cost is the governing metric, the lender is capping risk relative to your entire capitalization budget. This often occurs on under-market acquisitions or light-renovation deals where the purchase price is well below appraised value. You've bought well, so LTV gives you plenty of headroom — but the modest total cost means the LTC cap hits first. Mezzanine debt or preferred equity can bridge the gap between senior proceeds and total capital requirements.
What is the LTV formula?
LTV = Loan Amount ÷ Property Value. In this calculator, the LTV cap is applied to the purchase price (current value). If a lender has a 75% LTV max and the property costs $2,500,000, the maximum loan under that constraint is $1,875,000 — regardless of how large your renovation budget is.
Commercial Lending Guide

LTV vs. LTC: The Two Numbers That Determine How Much a Lender Will Actually Give You

You found the deal. The numbers work. The seller is motivated and the timing is right. Then you sit across from your lender and walk them through the pro forma — and the conversation pivots to two ratios you may not have modeled carefully enough. Loan-to-Value and Loan-to-Cost. The lender applies both simultaneously, takes whichever produces the lower dollar amount, and that number becomes your financing ceiling. Not a suggestion. A ceiling.

Most sponsors understand LTV in concept — it ties the loan to the property's appraised value. Fewer have internalized LTC as a real constraint until it bites them in the middle of a closing. Understanding how these two metrics interact, where they diverge, and which one will bind your specific deal is the difference between a capitalization plan that survives lender scrutiny and one that gets repriced at the term sheet stage.

What Each Metric Is Actually Measuring

LTV and LTC aren't measuring the same risk. They're measuring two different things from the lender's perspective, and that distinction explains why they coexist in virtually every commercial lending relationship.

Loan-to-Value (LTV)

Loan-to-Value answers a specific question: if this loan defaults today and we need to sell the asset to recover principal, does the property's current market value give us enough cushion? The formula is straightforward — the loan amount divided by the appraised value or purchase price, expressed as a percentage. A 75% LTV on a $2,000,000 asset means the lender will advance up to $1,500,000, leaving a 25% equity buffer as protection against value erosion in a distressed sale.

LTV is backward-looking in the sense that it anchors to where value is today. On a stabilized, income-producing asset with a clear comparable sales market, that's a clean calculation. On a vacant building, a partially leased property, or anything requiring significant renovation, the "value today" question gets complicated fast — because today's value may bear little relationship to the value the sponsor is actually underwriting toward.

Loan-to-Cost (LTC)

Loan-to-Cost measures something different: the loan amount as a fraction of the total money being invested to create or stabilize the asset. That includes the purchase price, hard construction costs, soft costs (architecture, engineering, permits, surveys), financing costs during the construction or lease-up period, and any contingency reserves the lender requires. The formula is the loan amount divided by the sum of all these line items.

LTC is forward-looking. It's asking: given everything this project requires to reach the business plan, how much of that total outlay are we financing? An 80% LTC means the lender is funding 80 cents of every dollar of total project cost. The remaining 20 cents is the sponsor's required equity contribution — their skin in the game — which the lender uses as evidence that the borrower has both the financial capacity and the incentive to see the project through.

LTV = Loan Amount ÷ Current Appraised Value (or Purchase Price) LTC = Loan Amount ÷ Total Project Cost (Purchase + Construction + Soft Costs + Contingency)

Why Lenders Apply Both at the Same Time

The dual-metric framework exists because each ratio captures a risk the other misses.

LTV alone is insufficient for development or value-add deals because the current appraised value of a distressed or vacant property may be far below what the project actually needs to cost. Imagine a warehouse purchased for $800,000 that requires $1,200,000 in conversion work to become a functional mixed-use building. The lender that only looks at LTV sees a $800,000 asset and caps their loan accordingly — which funds the purchase but leaves the entire construction phase uncovered. That's not a real financing solution.

LTC alone is insufficient because it doesn't protect the lender against a scenario where the sponsor overpays for the land or inflates the construction budget, resulting in a loan balance that exceeds what the finished asset is actually worth. A sponsor who budgets $3,000,000 for a project worth $2,200,000 at completion has an underwater loan from day one, regardless of what the LTC ratio says.

Together, the two ratios create a dual constraint that caps leverage from both directions — value and cost — and gives the lender protection across both the acquisition and execution phases of a deal.

The binding constraint principle: Lenders don't average the two metrics. They calculate the maximum loan permitted under each limit independently, then lend to whichever produces the lower number. A deal that clears 80% LTV but violates 65% LTC gets funded at the LTC number. Every dollar above the binding constraint requires sponsor equity, mezzanine debt, or preferred equity to fill the gap.

When LTV Becomes the Binding Constraint

LTV tends to bind in situations where the property's current market value is low relative to the total capital the project requires. This happens most commonly in three scenarios.

The first is heavy value-add acquisitions — properties bought at a price that reflects their distressed or underperforming condition. A suburban office building with 30% occupancy trades at a capitalized value of its current NOI, which may be $1,200,000 even though the stabilized value at full occupancy is $3,500,000. A lender underwriting to current appraised value will cap the loan at 75% of $1,200,000, producing a $900,000 maximum — which may not even cover the purchase price, let alone the renovation budget.

The second is ground-up development. Land doesn't generate income. Appraised land value is typically a fraction of total project cost. LTV constraints on bare land acquisitions are among the tightest in commercial lending — many lenders won't advance more than 50–60% of raw land value, making LTV the dominant constraint before a single shovel hits the ground.

The third is repositioning plays in declining markets. When comparable sales reflect a softening market and appraisals come in below the sponsor's underwriting, the LTV ceiling drops even if the project budget hasn't changed. Deals that penciled at 70% LTV in one appraisal cycle may only support 62% LTV when the appraisal comes back lower than projected — a gap that forces the sponsor to either bring more equity or reduce the loan amount.

When LTC Becomes the Binding Constraint

LTC binds when the total project cost is high relative to the appraised value — which sounds counterintuitive until you see the math. The clearest example is a deal where the sponsor is buying well below market value.

Suppose a sponsor acquires a stabilized retail center for $1,800,000 in an off-market transaction where the appraised value is $2,400,000. The purchase was a genuine bargain — 25% below appraised value. The sponsor plans $400,000 in light renovation, bringing total project cost to $2,200,000.

At 75% LTV, the maximum loan is $1,800,000 (75% of $2,400,000 appraised value). At 80% LTC, the maximum loan is $1,760,000 (80% of $2,200,000 total cost). LTC is now binding — not because the deal is risky, but because buying at a discount compresses total cost relative to appraised value in a way that makes LTC the tighter ratio. The "reward" for buying well is, counterintuitively, a slightly lower available loan amount.

LTC also tends to bind on highly efficient development budgets — projects where skilled sponsors have minimized cost through design, contractor relationships, or phased approaches. A sponsor who builds for $120 per square foot in a market where stabilized product trades for $200 per square foot creates a project where LTV (based on finished value) gives far more headroom than LTC (based on actual costs).

The Role of Lender Type

Not all lenders apply LTV and LTC the same way. The differences matter enormously when you're deciding which capital sources to approach.

Community and regional banks typically underwrite to current "as-is" appraised value. LTV dominates because these lenders operate under regulatory capital requirements that link to the appraised value of the collateral securing the loan. They're less comfortable with forward-looking "as-stabilized" or "as-complete" valuations. For value-add deals, this makes them difficult financing partners unless the purchase price is well supported by current value.

Bridge and debt fund lenders — the private credit market — often underwrite to "as-complete" or "as-stabilized" value. They'll commission an appraisal that values the property as if the renovation or lease-up has already occurred, then apply LTV to that higher future value. This effectively raises the LTV ceiling and shifts the binding constraint toward LTC. Bridge lenders live in the gap that banks leave, and their willingness to underwrite to future value is their primary competitive differentiation.

Construction lenders — both bank and non-bank — almost always apply dual constraints, and LTC is typically the more carefully scrutinized metric. On a ground-up deal, the lender is advancing money against a property that doesn't exist yet. LTC is their mechanism for ensuring the sponsor is co-investing meaningfully in the outcome.

Life insurance companies and CMBS lenders focus almost exclusively on stabilized, income-producing assets. For these lenders, LTV dominates because they're underwriting a fully operational property with a clear NOI stream and comparable sales. LTC is rarely discussed because there's no construction phase to worry about.

Filling the Gap: Mezzanine Debt and Preferred Equity

When the senior loan — capped by whichever constraint binds — doesn't cover the full project cost, sponsors have three options: bring more cash equity, reduce the project scope to bring costs down, or introduce a second layer of capital between senior debt and common equity.

Mezzanine debt and preferred equity exist specifically to fill this gap. Both sit above common equity in the capital stack and below senior debt. Mezzanine debt is typically structured as a loan secured by a pledge of the ownership interests in the borrowing entity (not a direct lien on the property). Preferred equity takes a direct ownership stake in the entity but with preferred distribution and redemption rights ahead of common equity holders.

The practical question is whether the additional cost of mezzanine or preferred capital is worth it relative to simply bringing more equity. Mezzanine rates in the current market run from 10% to 15%+ depending on risk profile. At those rates, a $500,000 mezz tranche on a five-year hold costs $250,000 to $375,000 in interest — against the alternative of deploying that $500,000 as equity and simply reducing your levered return. The calculus depends on the deal's return profile and whether the sponsor actually has the equity available to fill the gap directly.

Running the Reconciler Before You Model

The most practical use of an LTV/LTC reconciler isn't to confirm a deal you've already modeled — it's to run it before you start modeling, using rough estimates of purchase price, construction budget, and the lender's typical ratios for your deal type.

That 90-second exercise tells you which constraint will bind and, critically, how sensitive your maximum loan amount is to each input. If LTV is binding, the variable that matters most is purchase price — negotiating $100,000 off the acquisition cost raises your LTV headroom by $75,000 at 75% LTV. If LTC is binding, the variables that matter are construction scope and soft cost efficiency.

Knowing which constraint drives your deal also tells you which lender category to approach first. If LTV is the binding constraint, the bridge lender who will underwrite to as-complete value can solve your problem — the community bank cannot. If LTC is binding, it's an equity efficiency question, not a lender type question.

Pre-underwriting habit: Run this tool with three scenarios — base case, downside purchase price, and upside construction budget — before your first conversation with a lender. You'll know the exact equity gap under each scenario before anyone can create it as a surprise at the term sheet stage.

Common Mistakes That Surface at the Closing Table

  • Modeling only LTC in the pro forma. Sponsors who size their construction loan based purely on LTC forget that LTV will be tested at commitment, when an appraisal is ordered. If the "as-is" value comes in below expectations, the LTV constraint may cut the loan $200,000–$400,000 below what the LTC calculation allowed — forcing a last-minute equity call that may not be fundable on short notice.
  • Treating the appraisal as a formality. The appraiser works for the lender, not the sponsor. An appraisal that comes in 8% below the sponsor's underwriting of as-complete value is not uncommon, and in an LTV-constrained deal, that gap translates directly into a smaller loan. Build appraisal conservatism into your equity reserve assumptions.
  • Ignoring soft costs in the LTC denominator. Sponsors routinely budget hard construction costs precisely and estimate soft costs loosely. Architecture, engineering, permits, lender fees, legal, title, and insurance during construction can add 8–15% to the hard cost number. A $1,200,000 hard cost budget often carries $150,000–$180,000 in soft costs. Underestimate those, and the total project cost — and thus the LTC constraint — comes out wrong.
  • Changing the project scope after commitment. Once a construction loan is committed, the lender has set the loan amount based on specific cost and value inputs. Scope increases that raise total project cost above the committed amount reduce effective LTC, potentially triggering a reserve requirement or additional equity call. Change orders are a construction lending fact of life — but material scope creep can violate LTC covenants and give the lender grounds to pause draws.
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