For two years, bridge lending was either prohibitively expensive or functionally unavailable for middle-market sponsors. Rate caps alone could eat 100–200 basis points of your return. Lenders tightened boxes. Sponsors waited.
That market has shifted. Bridge-to-perm structures are back — not because rates dropped dramatically, but because the spread environment has normalized and lenders have recalibrated their risk models. The question isn't whether bridge capital is available. It's whether it's the right tool for your deal.
What changed
Three things converged in late 2025 and early 2026:
- Spread compression. Bridge spreads over SOFR have tightened from 400–500 bps to 275–375 bps for quality sponsors with real track records. The debt fund market is competitive again.
- Rate cap costs normalized. A 2-year SOFR cap at 4.00% that cost 3.5% of loan amount in 2023 now costs under 1.5%. That's a material change in your all-in cost of capital.
- Perm takeout visibility. Agency spreads are stable. Life company allocations are open. Lenders are comfortable underwriting an exit because they can see what the perm market will look like in 18–24 months.
When bridge-to-perm makes sense
Not every transitional deal needs bridge debt. The structure works best in a narrow set of circumstances:
- Light value-add with a 12–18 month business plan. Unit turns, common area upgrades, management transition. Not gut rehabs or repositioning plays that take 36 months.
- Stabilized NOI that's 6–12 months away. You need the bridge to season the rent roll, not to fund a speculative lease-up.
- Clear agency or life co exit. If you can't underwrite a perm takeout at today's rates, the bridge is a bet on rate movement — and that's a different conversation.
The checklist before you sign
We run every bridge-to-perm structure through the same framework before recommending it to a sponsor:
- What's the all-in cost? Rate + origination + rate cap + exit fee + legal. Most sponsors undercount by 50–80 bps.
- What's the perm takeout look like at today's rates? Not projected rates. Today's rates. If the deal doesn't work at a 6.25% perm coupon, you're making a rate bet.
- What happens if the business plan takes 6 months longer? Extension options matter. A 2+1+1 with reasonable extension fees is very different from a hard 24-month term.
- Who's the lender behind the lender? Debt funds have different capital sources. CLO-funded shops behave differently than balance-sheet lenders when markets get choppy.
- What are the prepayment terms? Some bridge lenders lock you in with yield maintenance or minimum interest guarantees that make early refinance punitive.
Our take
Bridge-to-perm is a good tool for the right deal. It's not a substitute for permanent financing on a stabilized asset, and it's not a rescue plan for a deal that doesn't pencil. The sponsors who are using it well right now are the ones with tight business plans, realistic exit assumptions, and enough liquidity to absorb a 6-month delay.
We're placing bridge capital across multifamily, industrial, and retail right now. If you have a transitional deal that needs sizing, we'll tell you whether bridge-to-perm is the right structure — or whether you're better off going straight to perm.
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