New construction and infill development are active across Maryland — from teardown rebuilds and infill homes in Baltimore to higher-value spec building in the DC suburbs around Silver Spring and Columbia. Building from the dirt up is a different animal than buying an existing property, and the financing has to match. Ground-up construction loans in Maryland from Tidal Loans fund land, materials, and labor through a draw schedule that tracks the build, so the money shows up when each phase is ready to pay for. We’ve financed Maryland builders and investors as a direct lender since 2016.
A ground-up construction loan is short-term financing for building a new structure from scratch on a vacant or cleared lot. It’s underwritten around the project — the land, the plans, the budget, and what the finished property will be worth — and it disburses in milestones rather than in one lump sum. For Maryland investors developing spec homes, infill projects, or small multifamily, it’s the financing built for the job.
How Ground-Up Construction Loans Work
Two numbers drive most construction loans. The first is loan-to-cost (LTC) — how much of the total project cost we’ll fund, often a large majority, with you covering the rest through land equity or cash. The second is loan-to-after-completion-value — we also check that the loan stays within a comfortable percentage of what the finished property will be worth. The deal has to pencil out on both.
The mechanics run on the draw schedule. Rather than releasing all the money at closing, we disburse funds in stages as construction hits defined milestones — foundation, framing, mechanicals, drywall, finish work. Before each draw, an inspection confirms the work is complete, then funds release. You typically pay interest only on the balance drawn so far, so your early payments are small and grow as the project progresses. Model your numbers with our construction loan calculator, and see the full approach on our ground-up construction hub.
What Maryland Investors Build
The most common project we fund is the spec home — building a single-family house to sell on completion, the new-construction cousin of a Maryland fix and flip. The second is infill and teardown development, building on a vacant lot or replacing an outdated structure, which is especially active in Baltimore’s neighborhoods and the high-value DC suburbs where land is scarce. The third is build-to-rent, constructing a property to hold as a rental and refinance into a long-term Maryland DSCR loan once it’s complete and leased. And the fourth is small multifamily construction, building a duplex, triplex, or small apartment building, which often graduates into our Maryland multifamily program.
Ground-Up Construction Requirements
New construction asks more of the borrower than any other short-term loan, because you’re financing a plan, not a finished asset. Experience carries real weight — builders who’ve completed ground-up projects get the strongest terms, though first-time builders aren’t shut out when the team and plan are solid. The project package matters: architectural plans, a realistic and detailed budget, the permits or a clear path to them, and a timeline. Land and equity are part of the structure — you’ll generally bring the lot and some cash, which sets your loan-to-cost. Credit is reviewed, though the project and team drive the decision. And the exit has to be clear — a sale on completion or a refinance into permanent financing.
Construction Lending Across Maryland’s Major Markets
We fund ground-up projects across all of Maryland’s major markets. In Baltimore, our busiest Maryland market, infill construction on vacant lots and teardown rebuilds are especially active. In the DC suburbs around Silver Spring, high values and scarce land make spec building and infill attractive for builders who can deliver. In Columbia and the Howard County corridor, steady demand supports new construction. We lend across Germantown, Waldorf, Annapolis, and the surrounding submarkets statewide.
How Maryland Construction Loans Get Paid Off
Every ground-up loan ends one of two ways. If you’re building to sell, the sale of the finished property pays off the loan and books your profit. If you’re building to hold, you refinance into permanent financing once the property is complete and, for a rental, leased — most often a Maryland DSCR loan that qualifies on the new property’s rent. In some cases a Maryland bridge loan carries the project through the gap between completion and permanent financing. We map the exit at the start so the whole structure points cleanly at the finish.
Maryland Construction Loan Parameters
| Property Types | Single-family, infill, build-to-rent, and small multifamily |
| Loan Types | Ground-up construction, fix & flip, bridge, DSCR/rental, multifamily |
| Markets | Baltimore, Silver Spring, Columbia, Germantown, Waldorf, Annapolis, and surrounding submarkets |
| Loan Amounts | No minimum – $20MM |
| Leverage | Up to 70% of after-completion value; high LTC with 100% of hard construction cost |
| Term | Typically 12–24 months, matched to the build |
Frequently Asked Questions
How are funds released on a Maryland construction loan? Funds are released through a draw schedule rather than all at once. We disburse money in stages tied to completed milestones — foundation, framing, mechanicals, finish work — and an inspection confirms each stage is done before that draw releases. You typically pay interest only on the funds drawn so far, so your early payments are small and grow as the build progresses.
Do I need construction experience to qualify in Maryland? Experience helps and earns the best terms, because execution is the biggest risk in any build, but first-time builders can still qualify. When a borrower is newer to ground-up construction, we look more closely at the project package and especially the general contractor. A detailed budget, proper plans, and clear permits go a long way toward making a first Maryland project fundable.
What’s the difference between a construction loan and a fix and flip loan? A fix and flip loan renovates an existing structure, while a ground-up construction loan builds a new one from the ground up. Construction loans rely on detailed plans, permits, and a milestone-based draw schedule, and they generally run longer because building takes more time than renovating. Both are short-term investor loans that exit through a sale or a refinance.
Can I use a Maryland construction loan to build a rental? Yes. Build-to-rent is a common use. You finance the build with a construction loan, then refinance into long-term financing such as a DSCR loan once the property is complete and leased. The DSCR refinance qualifies on the finished property’s rental income rather than your personal income, making the transition to a permanent hold clean.
How long do ground-up construction loans last? Most run twelve to twenty-four months to match a typical build timeline, with the exact term set to fit your project’s scope. They’re short-term by design and meant to be replaced once the structure is finished — paid off by a sale or refinanced into permanent financing. We build in realistic margin so the project has room to reach completion.
Do you fund construction across all of Maryland? We lend statewide. Baltimore and the DC suburbs are our most active construction markets, but we finance ground-up construction in Columbia, Germantown, Waldorf, Annapolis, and the surrounding areas. Building costs, lot availability, and permitting vary by market, and we structure each loan to fit the project and the local conditions.