Understanding Real Estate Financing Options in Puerto Rico—with Real Examples
Release Date: 11/13/2025
Understanding Real Estate Financing Options in Puerto Rico – With Real Examples
Financing is the engine behind every successful real estate deal. Whether you are acquiring land, developing multifamily housing, repositioning a commercial asset, or scaling an existing business, understanding your financing options in Puerto Rico is essential.
This guide summarizes key financing structures commonly used in Puerto Rico, together with practical examples. It is designed to help investors, developers and business owners choose the right tool for each project.
Note: Examples below are illustrative and simplified. Every project should be evaluated with proper legal, tax, and financial advice.
1. Real Estate Loans
Real estate loans are loans secured by a mortgage on real property. They are typically used to:
- Purchase residential or commercial properties
- Refinance existing debt on a property
- Inject capital for renovations or improvements
Example – Primary Residence in Guaynabo
A buyer in Guaynabo wants to purchase a $750,000 single-family home but prefers to conserve cash for interior upgrades and furniture. A real estate loan finances 85% of the purchase price, secured by the property, while the buyer allocates personal funds to remodeling and design.
2. Acquisition Loans
Acquisition loans are used to purchase a specific asset, such as an investment building or business entity. Traditional lenders often require strong historical performance and a full review of the buyer’s credit profile.
Private acquisition lenders can move faster by focusing on the strength of the underlying asset.
Example – 8-Unit Multifamily in Ponce
An investor identifies an 8-unit multifamily building in Ponce with stable occupancy and consistent rental income. The seller wants a quick closing. While a traditional bank requires several weeks of underwriting, a private acquisition lender evaluates the rent roll, expenses and asset value, then approves the financing in 72 hours. The investor closes before competing buyers enter the negotiation.
3. Bridge Loans
Bridge loans are short-term, asset-based loans secured by real estate. They are ideal when a property is in transition and does not yet qualify for long-term bank financing.
- Fast funding for time-sensitive acquisitions
- Capital for repositioning or rehab
- Temporary financing until stabilization and refinance
Example – Mixed-Use Building in Santurce
A developer acquires a mixed-use building in Santurce that requires immediate electrical upgrades and façade improvements. Conventional lenders hesitate until the property is stabilized. A bridge lender provides $450,000 within two weeks, allowing the developer to complete repairs, increase cash flow, and later refinance into a lower-rate, long-term loan.
4. Mezzanine Loans
Mezzanine financing sits below senior debt but above common equity. It is often structured as subordinated debt or preferred equity and carries a higher interest rate due to higher risk.
It is commonly used to fund expansion, acquisitions or large capital projects without pledging additional hard collateral.
Example – Boutique Hotel Expansion in Rincón
A hospitality group operates a successful boutique hotel in Rincón and wants to expand by acquiring the adjacent lot to build 12 additional rooms. Their current senior lender will not increase the loan. A mezzanine lender provides $1.2 million as preferred equity. The expansion proceeds, the hotel increases its room count and revenue, and the mezzanine position is repaid later through refinancing or sale.
5. Joint Venture (JV) Equity Participation
A Joint Venture is formed when two or more parties contribute equity and share control, profits and risks. In real estate, this often involves a landowner and a capital partner.
- Build on complementary strengths
- Share costs and risks
- Access larger or more complex projects
- Accelerate speed to market
Example – Landowner & Investor in Vega Baja
A landowner in Vega Baja controls a prime 0.83-acre parcel suitable for a walk-up multifamily project but lacks the funds for design and construction. An investor brings capital; the landowner contributes the land. Together they form a JV with a 40/60 split, share decision-making, and participate proportionally in rental income and future sale proceeds.
6. Working Capital Loans
Working capital represents the liquidity needed for daily operations. Private lenders may provide working capital secured by:
- Real estate
- Equipment
- Inventory
- Receivables
Example – Construction Company in Caguas
A construction firm in Caguas has $300,000 in receivables due in 90 days but must mobilize crews for a new project immediately. A working capital loan secured by machinery and inventory provides the liquidity required to keep operations running without delaying the new contract.
7. DIP Loans (Debtor-in-Possession Financing)
Debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing is designed for companies undergoing Chapter 11 restructuring. It is usually senior to existing debt and is approved by the Bankruptcy Court.
Example – Manufacturing Plant in Bayamón
A small manufacturing plant in Bayamón faces financial distress due to supply chain disruptions and files for Chapter 11. A DIP lender provides $900,000 in senior secured financing under a court-approved plan. The company uses the funds to maintain operations and reorganize, later emerging with a healthier capital structure.
8. Hypothecation Loans
Hypothecation loans are short-term loans fully collateralized by real estate mortgages and, often, strong personal or corporate guarantees.
Example – Experienced Investor in Carolina
A seasoned investor in Carolina needs $600,000 quickly to secure an opportunity but prefers not to refinance long-term holdings. The investor pledges two existing mortgages with strong equity and signs a corporate guarantee. The lender underwrites primarily the collateral and experience, funding the loan within a compressed timeframe.
9. Revolving Credit Facility
A revolving credit facility is a flexible line of credit up to a pre-approved limit. The borrower:
- Draws funds as needed
- Repays and reuses the line
- Pays interest only on the amount actually used
Example – Retail Operator in Mayagüez
A retail business in Mayagüez experiences strong seasonality during holidays. A revolving credit facility of $500,000 allows the company to stock inventory ahead of peak season, then repay the balance after sales are collected, without having to negotiate a new loan every year.
Each of these tools—real estate loans, acquisition and bridge loans, mezzanine capital, JV equity, working capital, DIP loans, hypothecation and revolving credit—serves a different strategic purpose. The key is to match the right structure to the right project, timeline and risk profile.
If you are exploring land purchases, developments, or creative financing for real estate projects in Puerto Rico, I am available to guide you and your team.
Contact Real Estate Broker Walter Rivera Santos, Lic. C-24587 for zoning insights, deal structuring, and introductions to specialized lenders and partners.
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