Tag Archives: DebtFunds

2026 CRE Refinancing: Why Capital Availability Is No Longer Enough

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. 

When a CRE Loan Matures and the Refinance Doesn’t Clear the Existing Debt

by: Adam Horowitz

Most borrowers coming into maturity today expected to refinance. What they’re realizing is that the refinance doesn’t clear the loan.

Across the deals we’re seeing, it’s not a question of whether debt is available. It’s that the new loan is coming in materially below the existing balance. That gap is what’s driving decisions right now.

According to industry data from groups like the Mortgage Bankers Association and Trepp, over $1.5 trillion of U.S. commercial real estate debt is maturing between 2025 and 2027. Much of that was originated in a very different environment. That’s the backdrop for what’s happening today. In this environment, working with us at Lever Capital Partners can help borrowers understand where their deal actually stands and what options are realistically on the table.

This Isn’t a Rate Problem, It’s a Proceeds Problem

Higher rates are part of the story, but they’re not the core issue.

What has changed more meaningfully is how loans are being sized. Lenders are underwriting to higher debt yields, lower leverage, and actual in-place cash flow. There is less reliance on projected growth, and more emphasis on where the deal stands today.

The result is straightforward. Even when a property is performing, it often doesn’t support the same loan proceeds it did a few years ago. We are consistently seeing situations where the new loan comes in 10 to 25 percent below the existing balance. That is where deals start to break.

This is not a liquidity issue. Capital is still there. It is a structure issue.

A Lot of These Deals Only Worked in One Environment

Many of the loans coming due today were structured between 2020 and 2022, when leverage was higher, rates were lower, and underwriting gave more credit to future rent growth.

Take those assumptions away, and the structure does not hold the same way.

That does not mean the asset failed. In many cases, the property is stable and performing. The issue is that the original capital stack was built around conditions that no longer exist.

Where the Pressure Shows Up

The pressure point is simple. The existing loan balance is higher than what the market will refinance today.

That gap forces decisions.

In some cases, it is driven purely by leverage. In others, it is a combination of rate movement, flat values, and underwriting discipline. For deals that were already thinly capitalized, there is very little room to absorb that shift.

What we are seeing more frequently is that sponsors are not dealing with an operational problem. They are dealing with a capital structure that no longer works.

What Sponsors Are Actually Doing

At this point, most borrowers are not choosing between ideal outcomes. They are choosing how to manage the gap.

Some are writing checks to complete a cash-in refinance and protect their basis. Others are bringing in preferred equity or mezzanine capital, not as an optimization, but as a way to get the deal closed. That comes with a higher cost of capital and a different risk profile.

There are also situations where the numbers simply do not justify putting more money into the deal. In those cases, the conversation shifts toward a recapitalization, a sale, or stepping away entirely.

There is no clean solution once the gap shows up. There are only trade-offs.

What Lenders Are Actually Doing

Lenders are still active, but the approach is more disciplined.

They are sizing to current performance, not future expectations. They are more focused on downside protection, and less willing to stretch to make a deal fit a prior capital structure. Extensions are happening, but they are no longer automatic and almost always come with conditions.

The assumption that every loan refinances has been removed from the market.

What This Looks Like in Practice

A deal financed in 2021 at around 70 percent leverage reaches maturity today. Under current underwriting, that same asset might support something closer to the mid-50s to low-60s range, depending on the asset and market.

That difference creates the gap.

At that point, the borrower is not deciding whether to refinance. They are deciding how to solve the shortfall, whether that means adding capital, restructuring the deal, or exiting.

What Matters Now

The sponsors navigating this best are the ones getting in front of it early.

That means running realistic refinance scenarios, understanding where proceeds will land, and identifying the gap before time becomes a constraint. The biggest mistake we see is treating maturity like a formality instead of what it has become, which is a capital event.

This is where we typically come in, helping sponsors quantify that gap, understand how lenders are actually sizing deals today, and structure solutions that reflect current market conditions rather than past assumptions.

Final Thought

Loan maturity used to be routine.

Today, it is where the capital stack gets exposed.

The deals that get through this cycle are not the ones with the best story. They are the ones where the structure works under today’s constraints.

$1.8 Trillion of CRE Debt Is Coming Due. Here’s How Deals Are Actually Getting Refinanced in 2026

by: Adam Horowitz

Over $1.5 trillion to $1.8 trillion in U.S. commercial real estate debt is set to mature between 2026 and 2027, according to industry estimates from the Mortgage Bankers Association and Trepp. Much of this debt was originated in a very different environment, characterized by lower interest rates, higher leverage, and more aggressive underwriting. Today, the landscape has shifted. Refinancing is no longer a routine process. It has become one of the most critical strategic decisions sponsors face. In this environment, working with experienced capital advisors like us at Lever Capital Partners can help sponsors navigate changing lender expectations and structure deals that are positioned to close.

This is not simply a rate issue. It is a structural one.

Why Refinancing Is More Difficult Today

Higher interest rates continue to pressure debt service coverage ratios, reducing loan proceeds even for otherwise stable assets. Many loans that were originated in the 3–4% rate environment are now refinancing into 6–8%+ rates, significantly impacting cash flow and loan sizing.

At the same time, lenders are more selective. Leverage levels have come down, credit boxes have tightened, and underwriting assumptions are more conservative.

In many cases, asset values have not kept pace with these changes. As a result, loans that were once comfortably sized at 70–75% loan-to-value are now being underwritten closer to 55–65%. The outcome is a growing disconnect between existing loan balances and what new lenders are willing to provide.

The Refinancing Gap Is Now the Central Challenge

This disconnect has created what many are calling the refinancing gap. Even high-quality assets with strong sponsorship are facing situations where senior debt alone cannot take out the existing loan.

Sponsors are left with a limited set of options. They can contribute additional equity, sell into a potentially unfavorable market, or restructure the capital stack to bridge the difference. Increasingly, the third option is becoming the most practical path forward.

How Deals Are Actually Getting Done

In 2026, refinancing is less about replacing a loan and more about rebuilding the capital stack.

Sponsors are combining senior debt with mezzanine financing or preferred equity to close proceeds gaps. Stretch senior loans and structured debt solutions are also gaining traction, particularly for assets with strong fundamentals but temporary constraints.

For transitional properties, bridge-to-permanent strategies are being used to buy time and improve loan sizing at stabilization.

These approaches reflect a broader shift in the market, where debt funds and alternative lenders now account for a significant share of new CRE lending activity, stepping in where traditional banks have pulled back.

What Lenders Are Prioritizing

Lenders today are focused on durability and downside protection. Strong, stable cash flow remains the primary driver of loan sizing.

Debt yields have moved meaningfully higher, with many lenders targeting 8–10%+ debt yields, reinforcing the shift toward lower leverage and more conservative structures.

Conservative underwriting, realistic business plans, and clear exit strategies are essential.

Sponsor quality also matters more than ever. Liquidity, experience, and the ability to navigate complexity all play into lender confidence. Perhaps most importantly, lenders are prioritizing structure. Deals that are thoughtfully assembled and aligned with current risk parameters are far more likely to close than those chasing maximum leverage.

Execution certainty has become more valuable than headline pricing.

Timing Is Now a Strategic Advantage

In this environment, timing is not just a logistical consideration. It is a strategic one. Sponsors who begin the refinancing process early have more flexibility to explore different capital options and structure the deal appropriately.

Waiting too long often results in limited choices and reactive decisions. In a market where structure determines outcome, time has become one of the most important forms of leverage.

Where Lever Capital Partners Helps

Refinancing today requires more than simply finding a lender. It requires aligning the right mix of capital with the realities of the deal.

At Lever Capital Partners, we work with sponsors to source and structure that capital. By accessing a broad network of banks, life companies, debt funds, mezzanine lenders, and preferred equity providers, Lever helps bridge refinancing gaps and position transactions for execution. Equally important, we translate complex situations into clear, financeable structures that lenders are willing to support.

Refinancing Is Now a Strategy

The upcoming wave of maturities will test even experienced sponsors. The difference between preserving value and losing it will often come down to how well the capital stack is designed.

In today’s market, refinancing is no longer a transaction. It is a strategy.