Bridge Loan: What It is and How It Works

A bridge loan is a short-term loan that’s used to make a down payment on a new home. A bridge loan can come in handy if you need extra cash to buy a new home before selling your current home and want to make an offer without it being conditional on your home selling first.

Learn how bridge loans work, the costs involved and pros and cons to determine if they’re a good fit for your homebuying situation.

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What is a bridge loan?

A bridge loan, also known as a swing loan or gap loan, acts as a “bridge” between selling your current home and buying a new one. A bridge loan is a short-term mortgage secured by a portion of the equity in your current home, even if it’s for sale, to use toward the down payment on a new home. Your home equity is the difference between your home’s value and the balance of your mortgage.

Bridge loans are a good alternative to a cash-out refinance, which doesn’t allow you to borrow against your current home’s equity if it’s listed for sale. Bridge loans also help with the balancing act of buying and selling a house at the same time.

When you need a bridge loan

Some common scenarios that a bridge loan may help with include:

How does a bridge loan work?

In many ways, a bridge loan works like any other mortgage. The lender qualifies you based on a review of your income, assets and credit and requires an appraisal to confirm your home’s value. However, there are some important differences:

You’ll need to choose whether the loan is a first or second mortgage

You can borrow more than you currently owe and pocket the difference with one mortgage, or you can take out a smaller loan against a portion of your home’s equity with a second loan.

Here’s how each works:

You’ll typically be able to borrow up to 75% of your home’s value

Whether you take out a first- or second-mortgage bridge loan, you won’t be able to tap all of your home’s equity. A bridge loan may not make sense if you don’t have more than 20% equity.

You may have options for how you make your monthly payment

Depending on the lender’s terms, you may make interest-only monthly payments, no payments until the home is sold or fixed monthly payments.

You’ll pay closing costs and possibly have a prepayment penalty

Expect to pay 1.5% to 3% of the loan amount in closing costs for a bridge loan. Additionally, bridge loan rates can be as high as 6.99% to 8%, depending on your loan amount and credit profile. Steer clear of any lender that asks for an upfront deposit for a bridge loan; you’ll pay all bridge loan fees when the mortgage closes. Check your bridge loan terms for a prepayment penalty.

You need to be prepared to pay the loan off within a short time period

A bridge loan usually needs to be repaid within 12 months or less. If you’re having any doubts about selling your home within that time period, you may want to consider buying your new home with piggyback financing instead. You can split your mortgage up into a first mortgage amount that gives you the payment you want, and then borrow the difference with a second mortgage home equity line of credit or home equity loan. When you sell your home, you’ll pay off the second mortgage balance, leaving you with just the first mortgage payment.

You won’t have the same legal protections as a standard loan

Unlike standard mortgage loans, bridge loans aren’t covered by the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), which sets standards for informing consumers about settlement costs and how lenders are paid. Make sure you shop around for the best bridge loan terms – they may vary significantly from lender to lender.

Bridge loan example:

Below is an example of the math involved in a bridge loan for the following situation: