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Bridge loans and DSCR loans are both tools for real estate investors—but they serve completely different purposes. Choosing the wrong one for your deal can mean higher costs, wrong timeline, or a loan that doesn't fit your exit strategy. Here's how to tell which is right for your situation.

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Hard money loans and conventional loans serve fundamentally different purposes for real estate investors. Understanding the differences—in underwriting, speed, cost, and use case—helps you choose the right tool for each deal rather than defaulting to the wrong financing structure.

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Hard money lending is one of the most misunderstood financing tools in real estate. The term sounds informal—even risky—but hard money loans are a legitimate, widely-used funding mechanism that powers thousands of real estate deals every year. Here's how private lending actually works, in plain language.

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When you're evaluating a private real estate lender for your next deal, legitimacy isn't optional. If you've found Lendoor while researching private construction loans, fix-and-flip financing, or DSCR rental loans and wondered "is Lendoor legit?"—you've asked exactly the right question. Here's a straight answer, with verifiable facts.

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Lendoor is a nationwide private real estate lender that provides financing for real estate investors, builders, and developers. The company offers hard money and alternative financing products—including ground-up construction loans, fix and flip loans, DSCR rental loans, and bridge loans—across the United States.

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Fix and Flip

4/4/2026

After-Repair Value (ARV) is the number that determines how much a lender will fund on your fix and flip project. Get it right and you unlock the maximum leverage for your deal. Get it wrong and you either get less money than you need or create a loan that puts your capital at risk.

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