Private Money → [Private Money] & this is part of the larger Phoenix Financing Guide→ [Phoenix Financing Guide]
Written by: Renee Burke
I’ve sat across the table from so many Phoenix investors over coffee in Scottsdale or on calls from their home offices in Chandler, walking through the details of private lending deals that just needed a little clarity to move forward. Custom loan terms aren’t some mysterious Wall Street invention — they’re practical tools shaped by real needs, like bridging a quick estate sale in Mesa or funding a fix-and-flip in Glendale before the market shifts.
Here in the Phoenix metro, where turnaround times can make or break a deal, private lenders craft these terms thoughtfully, always with an eye on the property’s potential and the borrower’s plan. Let me guide you through how it all comes together, step by step, so you feel steady if you’re considering one.
Core Elements of a Custom Loan Agreement
Every private loan starts with a clear, written agreement — think of it as the roadmap that protects everyone involved. At its heart, it spells out the loan amount, interest rate, repayment schedule, and any fees, tailored precisely to your project.
Lenders here often favor short terms — 6 to 24 months — perfect for our fast-paced market where investors buy, rehab, and sell or refinance within a season. You’ll negotiate whether it’s interest-only payments (common for flips, easing cash flow during renos) or amortizing, with a balloon payment at the end to settle the principal. In Phoenix, where summer slowdowns can stretch timelines, that flexibility means you’re not locked into rigid monthly principal reductions if your exit strategy is a quick refinance into a conventional loan.
Collateral is non-negotiable — usually the property itself, with the lender taking a first-position lien. They might ask for your rehab budget, contractor bids, and ARV (after-repair value) projections, especially for a house in Maryvale or Laveen where comps tell the real story.
Interest Rates and Points: Balancing Risk and Reward
Interest rates in private lending hover higher than banks — typically 8-12% — because lenders are funding speed and flexibility, not long-term stability. But here’s where “custom” shines: rates are often benchmarked to something like SOFR plus a spread (say, 5-7%), adjusted for your deal’s risk.
Points come next — upfront fees of 2-5% of the loan amount, paid at closing. A seasoned lender in Phoenix might drop to 1-2 points for a repeat borrower with a solid track record on East Valley rentals, or bump it up for a riskier ground-up build in South Tempe. These aren’t arbitrary; they reflect after-hours availability, local market savvy, and your equity position — lenders love seeing 25-30% down to keep loan-to-value (LTV) under 70%.
I always remind clients: negotiate these early. A good lender listens to your timeline — maybe interest-only for 12 months on a probate flip in Fountain Hills, then stepping up payments as tenants stabilize.
Term Lengths Tailored to Phoenix Timelines
Phoenix deals don’t drag like in slower markets. Short terms (6-12 months) suit pure flips: buy in winter, sell by spring snowbird rush. Longer ones (18-24 months) fit rentals or estates needing time for probate in Maricopa County Superior Court.
Extensions are common — often for a fee — if monsoons delay roof work or appraisals lag during peak season. Custom structures might include draw schedules for construction loans: funds released in phases (demo, framing, finishes) based on inspections, ensuring money matches progress on that Ahwatukee spec home.
For buy-and-hold investors eyeing passive income in Surprise, terms could stretch to 3 years with a refi option, blending private speed with longer stability.
Covenants and Protections: Guardrails, Not Roadblocks
Unlike banks with endless paperwork, private covenants are straightforward but firm. You might agree to no additional liens, maintain insurance (critical in our hail-prone Valley), or hit rent thresholds for a multi-family in West Phoenix.
“Covenant-lite” for low-risk deals; “heavy” for trickier ones, like a lien-encumbered estate in Sun City. These aren’t gotchas — they’re conversations. I’ve seen lenders waive minor ones for borrowers who communicate, like updating on a delayed CO (certificate of occupancy) from city inspectors.
Repayment Structures That Fit Your Exit
Private loans flex to your plan:
- Interest-Only: Monthly payments cover interest; principal due at maturity. Ideal for flips — keeps costs low while you boost value.
- Amortizing: Blends principal and interest, building equity over time. Rare short-term, but useful for stabilized rentals.
- Balloon: Big payoff at end, often via sale or refi. Phoenix investors lean here, timing refis with falling rates post-Fed pauses.
Exit strategies are documented upfront — sell, refi, or renew — preventing scramble if your Glendale multifamily needs extra seasoning for bank quals.
| Structure | Best For | Typical Term | Payments | Phoenix Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interest-Only Balloon | Flips/Fixers | 6-12 months | Interest monthly; principal end | Maryvale rehab, sell pre-summer |
| Amortizing | Rentals | 24-36 months | Principal + interest monthly | Chandler duplex, build equity |
| Draw Schedule | New Builds | 12-18 months | Phased draws on milestones | Tempe spec, city permits paced |
| Bridge Loan | Estates/Court | 6-9 months | Interest-only | Mesa probate, close by deadline |
Why Phoenix Private Lending Feels Personal
Our market’s micro-climates — hot investor spots like Roosevelt Row versus steady retiree enclaves in Peoria — demand customization. Lenders here know Title 11 bankruptcy quirks, HOA transfer fees in master-planned Anthem, and how 1031 exchanges time with escrow.
Misconceptions abound: “Private means predatory.” Not with reputable locals — it’s partner-like, with direct talks shaping terms to your ARV-backed plan. Fees feel high? They fund the speed that beats bank delays when a Surprise listing heats up.
Blending Lifestyle and Smart Strategy
Imagine funding that dream portfolio without lifestyle whiplash. Custom terms let you scale thoughtfully — a bridge for the family legacy home in Cave Creek, terms easing cash flow for poolside mornings in Arcadia. It’s finance that fits Phoenix living: sun-soaked flips, rental streams for grandkids’ funds.
Private lending thrives when borrower and lender align on vision — your profit timeline meeting their return goals.
If you’re exploring private lending for your next Phoenix deal, whether a tight-turnaround flip or a probate bridge, you don’t have to piece it together solo. These structures are powerful when navigated with someone who knows our market’s pulse.
If you’re thinking about making a move in Phoenix, you don’t have to figure it out alone. Reach out — I’m here to connect you with trusted options and walk through what fits your goals best.
Get the full Phoenix Market Insights → [Market Insights]


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