Fix-and-Flip Financing: Why Speed and Structure Matter More Than Rate

Fix-and-flip investing is a business of execution speed. Margins are made in the spread between acquisition price, renovation efficiency, and resale value — but they’re protected by one factor investors often underestimate: financing structure. For house flippers, contractors, and investors working on 1–4 unit properties, capital is not just a funding source. It’s an operational tool.

The Reality of Fix-and-Flip Projects

Unlike stabilized real estate, fix-and-flip deals involve moving parts that change in real time: • Renovation scopes evolve

• Contractor schedules shift

• Material costs fluctuate

• Exit timing depends on market absorption

Traditional financing isn’t designed for this environment. Lengthy approvals, rigid guidelines, and slow draws introduce friction at the exact moment investors need flexibility.

Where Profits Erode

Returns in fix-and-flip projects are highly sensitive to time. Delays increase:

• Interest and holding costs

• Insurance and taxes

• Opportunity cost of tied-up capital

A project that runs 60–90 days longer than planned can materially reduce margins — even if the resale price is strong.

Why Fix-and-Flip Loans Are Structured Differently

Fix-and-flip loans focus on the asset and the execution plan, not just borrower profile metrics. These loans typically fund:

• Property acquisition

• Renovation budget

• Short-term hold period

The goal is alignment: capital structured around how renovation projects actually unfold.

Who This Matters Most For

This structure is especially valuable for:

• Investors running multiple projects

• Contractors flipping properties

• Investors scaling from occasional flips to consistent volume

As deal flow increases, capital velocity becomes just as important as deal quality.

Kenbry Capital’s Approach

Kenbry Capital provides fix-and-flip financing for single-family homes and small multifamily properties (1–4 units). The focus isn’t simply closing a loan — it’s structuring capital that supports timelines, reduces friction during renovation, and allows investors to move confidently from acquisition to exit.

In fix-and-flip investing, the difference between a good deal and a great return often comes down to execution speed. Financing that moves with the project — rather than slowing it down — becomes a competitive advantage.