Private Lender vs Hard Money Lender: What’s the Difference for Investors?

If you have spent any time in real estate investing circles, you have heard the terms “private lender” and “hard money lender” used interchangeably. They are related but not identical — and understanding the difference can help you find the right financing source for your next deal. Here is a clear breakdown of how private lenders and hard money lenders differ, and when to use each.

What Is a Private Lender?

A private lender is an individual — or sometimes a small group of individuals — who lends their own money on real estate deals. Private lenders might be:

  • A successful real estate investor who has excess capital and wants passive income
  • A retired professional (doctor, lawyer, engineer) with investable assets looking for better returns than CDs or bonds
  • A family member or friend who agrees to lend you the down payment or purchase price in exchange for a fixed return
  • A small family office or high-net-worth individual who informally funds real estate deals

Private lenders are not businesses — they are people. They make decisions based on personal relationships, local knowledge, and individual risk tolerance. Rates and terms are entirely negotiable. A private lender might charge you 7% because they trust you; they might charge 12% because you are a first-time borrower. Documentation requirements vary from very little (handshake deal recorded in a promissory note) to quite structured.

What Is a Hard Money Lender?

A hard money lender is a company — not an individual — that makes asset-based loans secured by real property. Hard money lenders are typically:

  • Funded by a pool of investors (not just one person’s savings)
  • Operated as a licensed lending company with consistent underwriting criteria
  • Able to close multiple loans simultaneously across a pipeline of borrowers
  • Subject to state lending regulations and licensing requirements

Hard money lenders offer a product, not a personal relationship. Rates and terms are set by the company’s fund parameters — typically 10–13%, 2–3 origination points, 6–24 month terms. You are not negotiating with someone’s personal risk appetite; you are fitting into a loan program with defined criteria.

Key Differences Side by Side

FactorPrivate LenderHard Money Lender
Who they areIndividual investor or familyBusiness / company
Decision makingPersonal, relationship-basedSystematic, criteria-based
TermsFully negotiableStandard products with some flex
Rate range6–12% (varies widely)10–13% (more consistent)
SpeedCan be very fast (days) if personal relationship10–21 days standard
ReliabilityLess predictable (personal circumstances change)More consistent — business process
ScaleOne deal at a timeMultiple deals simultaneously
Finding themNetworking, REIA clubs, personal connectionsOnline search, referrals, directories

When Private Money Is Better

Private money — borrowing from a known individual — can be ideal when:

  • You have a relationship and can negotiate below-market rates. A private lender who trusts you may lend at 7–8%, well below hard money rates.
  • You need creative terms. A private lender can do interest-only, deferred interest, or profit-sharing arrangements that a hard money company won’t.
  • You need same-day capital. If a family member has already agreed to lend and you just need to paper the deal, you can literally close in 24 hours.
  • You want to borrow the down payment. Some private lenders will fund a second position or the down payment, while hard money companies typically won’t lend against anything but the first lien on investment property.

When Hard Money Is Better

A hard money lender — working through a professional lending company — is often better when:

  • You don’t have a private lender relationship yet. You can find a hard money lender today by searching online; finding a private lender takes months of networking.
  • You need a predictable timeline. A professional company has a defined process — appraisal, title, draw schedules — that private individuals often cannot reliably manage.
  • You need a larger loan. An individual private lender may only have $200,000 to lend. A hard money fund can do $2 million or more.
  • You need a formal commitment letter. A pre-approval or commitment letter from a hard money company is a recognized document in real estate transactions. A handshake from a private lender is not.

How Investors Combine Both

Many experienced investors use both: a hard money lender provides the first mortgage (say, 65–70% LTV) and a private lender provides the remaining 20–25% as a second lien or down payment. The investor effectively acquires a property with little to no personal cash out of pocket. This structure is common in fix-and-flip and BRRRR deals.

Important: hard money lenders often prohibit second liens. Always disclose any subordinate financing to your first lien lender — failing to do so is considered mortgage fraud.

Building a Private Lender Network

If you want access to private money, you need to build relationships before you need the money. Strategies that work:

  • Attend local real estate investor association (REIA) meetings regularly
  • Present your track record and past deals to potential lenders (deal summaries, photos, returns)
  • Pay your private lenders back on time and well — reputation compounds
  • Offer reasonable returns — 8–10% secured by real estate is attractive to many high-net-worth individuals currently earning 4–5% on CDs

Need a Hard Money Loan Now?

If you don’t have a private lender lined up but need to close on an investment property quickly, a hard money lender is your fastest path. Use the form on this page or call us to get a same-day term sheet. We work with fix-and-flip investors, DSCR holds, BRRRR deals, and cash-out refinances on non-owner-occupied properties.

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