Why Conservative After-Repair Values Win Deals

Written by Chad Cabalka → Meet the Expert

Written by Reneé Burke → Meet the Expert

Written by Hilary Marshall → Meet the Expert

Private Money [Private Money] & this is part of the larger Phoenix Financing Guide [Phoenix Financing Guide]

Written by: Renee Burke

In Phoenix real estate investing, there’s a quiet but powerful truth most seasoned lenders and borrowers learn the hard way: conservative after‑repair value (ARV) estimates are the ones that actually win deals.

It’s tempting to push ARV to the top of the comparable range, especially when running a rehab in a hot East Valley submarket or a trendy pocket near Central Phoenix. But when you sit across the table from a private lender, the most persuasive number is rarely the most optimistic one—it’s the one that feels measured, supportable, and careful.


What ARV Really Means to a Lender

For a private lender in our market, ARV is more than a profit target; it’s a risk‑management number.

Think of it this way:

  • ARV sets the ceiling for how much they feel comfortable financing against the project.
  • It defines the cushion between the loan amount and the expected sale price.
  • If the rehab goes longer than planned or the market softens, that cushion is what protects both the lender and the borrower.

In Phoenix, where some neighborhoods can rise quickly and then cool just as fast, conservative ARV is how lenders stay confident that the deal can still work even if things don’t go perfectly.


The Temptation of “Top‑of‑Comps” ARV

Most investors start with a simple idea: If the top comps are at $X, why can’t I use that as my ARV?

In practice, that approach often runs into two issues:

  • Top comps are just that—top examples: unimproved or better‑located homes, cleaner finishes, or unique features that don’t fully match your property.
  • Lenders know that in a weaker market cycle, you usually don’t get top‑of‑comps pricing; you get middle‑ or even lower‑range results.

In corridors like Goodyear, Peoria, or parts of the West Mesa, where builder and investor activity can spike, a slightly inflated ARV can look tempting on paper—but it can also scare lenders off or force them to shrink the loan size.


Why Conservative ARV Builds Trust

When you present a conservative ARV, you’re really doing three things:

1. You Show You Understand Risk

A conservative estimate signals that you’ve looked at the full range of comps, not just the ones that make your profit look the best. It tells the lender you’re not trying to sell hope—you’re trying to sell a realistic outcome.

2. You Make Your Numbers More Believable

If your ARV lines up with the middle of the comp range, and your rehab budget is detailed and reasonable, lenders see fewer red flags. You’re not asking them to “believe” in a stretch; you’re asking them to confirm a careful, data‑driven conclusion.

3. You Increase Your Chances of Getting Funded

In a market where private money is selective, borrowers who come in with inflated ARV often get pushed back, asked for more documentation, or asked to bring more equity. Those who start conservative are more likely to get a clean “yes” or only minor adjustments.


How Conservative ARV Plays Out in Phoenix

In our metro, the neighborhoods where conservative ARV really matters most are:

  • Newer master‑planned communities where pricing can be volatile and comps are still limited.
  • Speculative flips in areas where absorption is strong but not guaranteed.
  • ADU or value‑add projects where the incremental value hinges on exact execution and demand.

In those places, a lender who’s seen a few cycles will be more comfortable with a rehab plan that assumes a modest ARV uplift—say, 10–15% above the current range—than with a projection that assumes 25–30% jump with no supporting evidence.


The Hidden Benefit: Better Deal Terms

Counterintuitively, conservative ARV can actually lead to better terms, not worse. Here’s how:

  • Because the lender feels more confident in your ARV, they may allow a slightly higher percentage of the ARV to be financed, or ask for fewer reserves.
  • They’re less likely to cut your construction budget or hold back funds in stages.
  • You may also gain flexibility on timing or exit strategy, because the lender can see that your plan is grounded in reality.

In Phoenix, where speed and capital deployment matter, that kind of trust is priceless.


How to Build a Conservative ARV That Wins

When you’re preparing your next deal for a private lender, here are a few practical habits that help:

  • Run your comps tightly: focus on homes within a small radius, similar age, and similar condition.
  • Use the middle of the comp range as your baseline, not the top.
  • Build in a 5–10% margin of safety for days‑on‑market and minor price adjustments.
  • Share your ARV calculation with the lender, including how you arrived at the number and what you’re not assuming (no “magic” finishes or “one‑of‑a‑kind” buyer demand).

When lenders see that level of discipline, they’re more likely to view your deal as a solid, manageable opportunity—not a risky bet.


The Phoenix Investor’s Quiet Advantage

In our market, the investors who last aren’t the ones who always chase the maximum ARV. They’re the ones who consistently build deals around conservative, credible numbers that both they and their lenders can sleep on.

That discipline doesn’t just win approval on your next loan; it builds a reputation that can open doors to more capital, better terms, and stronger partnerships over time.


If you’re thinking about making a move in Phoenix, you don’t have to figure it out alone. I’m here to help you refine your ARV approach so your next rehab project feels as solid to your lender as it does to you. Reach out anytime, and we can walk through your comps and rehab plan together—so your numbers are not just optimistic, but believable.

Get the full Phoenix Market Insights  [Market Insights]

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