● The part that feels impossible

Who on earth lends 130% of a property?

Short answer: nobody does. No bank writes a 130% loan. The "130%" is two separate pieces stacked together — a normal ~70% loan from a real lender, and the seller carrying the rest. Once you see that, the whole thing stops being magic. Let's break it down.

A bank loan block and a seller block combining to cover a house

First: there is no "130% loan"

The single most important thing to un-confuse. Two different things are being added together.

Where "130%" actually comes from

One real lender at a safe ~70%, plus the seller financing the rest. Add them up and you describe the total as 130% — but no one person lent that.

100% of value ① A real lender — ~70% loan DSCR loan · well-secured · low risk ② The seller — carries ~60% seller financing / capital contribution ① + ② ≈ 130% of value — but that's two sources, not one 130% loan The bank never takes 130% of risk. It's safe at ~70%. The seller is the one financing everything above that — they are the second "lender."
Say it back to yourself: "A lender gives ~70%. The seller carries the other ~60%. Nobody lent 130%." That sentence is the whole module.

Why it looks like "two loans" at closing

There are two money sources at the table doing two different jobs — and one of them leaves the same day.

① The bridge (transactional) funder

A ONE-DAY loan — gone by tomorrow

A one-day money bridge crossing and looping back
  • Why it exists: you must show the full cash at the closing table before the permanent structure funds. It covers that timing gap.
  • How they collect: repaid the same day — "they get their money back right after they submit it to escrow" — plus a flat fee.
  • Whose credit: basically none of yours. They're secured by the deal and the lined-up exit, not your FICO.
  • Does it stay on the property? No. It's gone within 24 hours.

② The permanent DSCR loan

The real, lasting first mortgage

  • Why it exists: it's the actual financing on the property — about 70% of value, first position.
  • How they collect: monthly principal & interest from the rent, and full payoff at the refinance or sale.
  • Whose credit: mostly the property's income (see DSCR below) — with your credit as a gate/price.
  • Does it stay? Yes — until the balloon refinance replaces it.
So you don't end up with two lasting loans. The bridge funder is in-and-out the same day. What remains is one real loan (~70% DSCR) + the seller's carry. The seller is the second financier — they're just not a bank.

Who would ever fund above 100% — and why?

A
The bank won't, and doesn't have to. The DSCR lender sits at ~70% LTV with the property as collateral. If everything blows up, they foreclose and are very likely made whole. Low risk = they're happy to lend.
B
The seller funds the part above 70% — willingly. In exchange for carrying it, they get full price, a potentially tax-efficient payout at the balloon, and protections (60-day cure, balloon extension). They're betting on getting paid in 5–7 years instead of taking a discount today.
C
That's the trade. The seller is effectively the high-risk "second-position lender" — which is exactly why the Risk module matters: they took the riskiest slice, so the deal must genuinely cash flow and be disclosed honestly.

How each one actually gets paid back

The bridge funder?

Same day. Their cash goes into escrow, the deal closes, they're wired back immediately + a fee. They're never waiting.

The DSCR lender (the ~70%)?

Monthly + payoff. Principal & interest each month out of the rent, then the remaining balance is paid off when you refinance at the balloon (or sell).

The seller (the ~60%)?

At the balloon. They wait for the refinance, then get their lump sum from the new loan's proceeds. They're a patient financier, not a monthly lender (unless you agreed to monthly).

Is any of this on your credit?

Mostly no — and this is the second big un-confuser. The permanent loan is a DSCR loan: it's underwritten on the property's income, not your W-2 or debt-to-income ratio. The question the lender asks is "does the rent cover the mortgage?" (the Debt-Service-Coverage Ratio), not "how much do you personally earn?"

What a DSCR loan leans on

  • The property's net income vs. the loan payment (DSCR ≥ ~1.0–1.25).
  • The appraisal / value (the ~70% LTV).
  • Your credit score as a gate & pricing lever (a minimum FICO; better score = better rate).
  • Some reserves (a few months of payments in the bank).

What it does NOT require

  • Your personal W-2 income or job.
  • A clean personal debt-to-income ratio.
  • You to have done dozens of deals.
  • (That's why "we leverage our credibility and experience" works — the structure, not your paycheck, carries it.)

So credit matters as a door and a price tag, not as the thing the whole loan rests on. And if your credit or balance sheet isn't enough to clear that door — that's where a credit sponsor comes in.

A strong figure backing a smaller investor with a credit shield
A credit partner lends their balance sheet so the loan can happen.

A credit sponsor (also called a credit partner, loan guarantor, or "key principal") is someone with strong credit, net worth, and cash who backs the loan so it can be obtained — or priced better — when your own profile isn't enough on its own. Think of a co-signer, but one who's a professional partner with skin in the game.

1
What they provide: their FICO, their net-worth and liquidity (lenders often require net worth ≥ the loan and several months of reserves), and their signature/guaranty on the loan.
2
What they get: a fee (flat or a % of the loan) and/or a slice of equity — payment for putting their credit and balance sheet at risk.
3
Why it fits here: this is literally "leveraging our credibility and experience." The fund / sponsor brings the creditworthiness; you bring the deal. The "debt fund" Ben describes can itself be the credit/credibility behind the financing.
The one-line version

"A credit sponsor rents you their financial reputation so the loan gets approved. You supply the deal; they supply the balance sheet; they get paid a fee or equity for the risk."

Putting it all together

The whole financing in one breath

At closing, a one-day bridge loan covers the cash needed and is repaid that same day. The property carries one real loan — a DSCR loan at ~70%, qualified on the rent (with a credit sponsor backing it if your own credit isn't enough). The seller finances the rest (~60%) as patient capital, collecting their lump sum at the balloon refinance. Stack the 70% loan and the 60% seller carry and you can describe it as "130% financing" — but no single lender ever took 130% of the risk. The bank stays safe at 70%; the seller holds the rest.

Educational explanation. DSCR terms, minimum credit scores, reserve and net-worth requirements, and credit-sponsor/guaranty arrangements vary by lender and deal, and credit-partner compensation can carry legal and licensing considerations. Confirm specifics with the actual lender, a qualified attorney, and a CPA.