2026 CRE Refinancing: Why Capital Availability Is No Longer Enough

|BY levercp

by: Jack Moskow

Entering 2026, capital has returned to commercial real estate, but it is being deployed much more selectively than in prior cycles. Banks, life insurance companies, agencies, and private credit lenders are still active, yet the market is no longer rewarding broad risk-taking the way it did when rates were near historic lows. Today, lenders are focused on asset quality, sponsorship strength, income durability, and the borrower’s ability to support the capital stack under current underwriting standards. In this environment, the issue is not simply whether liquidity exists. The real question is whether a property’s basis and structure can support a refinance or transaction.

For many owners and developers, this has changed the financing conversation. A few years ago, borrowers could often focus mainly on pricing, proceeds, and execution speed. Now, the conversation is shifting from “What’s the rate?” to “How do we rebuild the capital stack?” Higher borrowing costs, with stabilized assets still seeing rates in roughly the 5.5%–6% range combined with lower valuations and more conservative lender sizing, have made structure just as important as liquidity. Even if capital is available, it may not be available at the leverage level needed to refinance an existing loan or support the original acquisition basis.

Liquidity is available, but it is selective.Stabilized multifamily, industrial, and grocery-anchored retail assets with strong cash flow continue to attract lender interest. Experienced sponsors with proven track records are also better positioned to access capital. However, assets with weaker fundamentals, uncertain leasing, or business plans that depend heavily on future rent growth are facing more scrutiny.

The bigger challenge is the refinancing gap created by loans originated during the low-rate environment. Between 2019 and 2022, many properties were financed at 70–75% loan-to-value, often with interest rates below 4%. As those loans mature, borrowers are now facing a very different lending environment.

Today, lenders are sizing closer to 50–60% loan-to-value placing more weight on debt yield, debt service coverage, and downside protection. As a result, new senior loan proceeds may fall well short of the existing debt balance.

That gap can create serious pressure for owners. A property may still be performing, but if the new senior loan cannot cover the maturing debt, the sponsor must find additional capital. In many cases, senior debt alone is no longer enough. This is where capital stack restructuring becomes essential. Mezzanine debt, preferred equity, joint venture equity, and other structured solutions can help bridge the gap between lender proceeds and the asset’s existing basis.

For owners who still believe in the long-term value of their assets, this type of structuring can be the difference between preserving ownership and being forced to sell at an unfavorable time. Layered capital can provide flexibility, help complete a refinance, and allow sponsors to hold through a difficult part of the cycle. However, these solutions need to be structured carefully. The wrong capital partner or an overly expensive structure can create new problems instead of solving the original one.

Lever Capital Partners helps sponsors navigate this environment by identifying the right financing solution for each asset and situation. In a market where basis increasingly determines liquidity, Lever works with borrowers to assess the gap, evaluate available capital sources, and structure the appropriate mix of senior debt, mezzanine financing, and preferred equity.

By leveraging relationships across banks, life insurance companies, agencies, and private credit lenders, Lever Capital Partners helps clients access capital that fits today’s underwriting standards. The goal is not just to find a loan, but to build a capital stack that can close, support the asset, and preserve long-term value. In 2026, surviving the refinancing cycle will depend less on whether capital exists and more on whether sponsors can structure around today’s reality.