The first hard money deal I ever watched close funded in nine days. A conventional bank had already told the investor “six to eight weeks,” and the seller wasn’t going to wait that long. That gap — between how fast a real estate deal moves and how slowly a traditional mortgage moves — is the entire reason hard money loans exist. When you need to close quickly, buy a property a bank won’t touch, or fund a renovation that a thirty-year mortgage was never designed for, hard money is the tool that gets it done. At Tidal Loans we’ve been writing these loans for investors since 2017, and this page lays out exactly how they work and when they make sense.
A hard money loan is short-term, asset-based financing secured by the property itself rather than by your personal income. The lender cares first and foremost about the deal — what the property is worth, what it will be worth after improvements, and how much skin you have in the game. Get those right and you can move at the speed real estate actually demands.