Building a Competitive Capital Stack for Florida Multifamily and CRE Deals

a street lined with palm trees and parked cars

Surprising fact: more than 40% of mid-market multifamily deals fail to close when traditional financing gaps appear.

This service page shows sponsors how to design a competitive capital stack that wins in a tighter market. We define competitive as smarter structuring, not just higher leverage.

Classic senior debt plus common equity often leaves a funding gap or forces expensive bridge solutions. We help owners and developers compare cost of capital, protect downside, and preserve upside.

Read on for clear explanations of stack layers, where preferred equity and mezzanine fit, and why C-PACE has become a practical advantage here.

What to expect: a practical guide from fundamentals through gap capital tradeoffs, C-PACE mechanics, best use cases, execution steps, and proof points—focused on term sheet to close.

Key Takeaways

  • Winning stacks require smarter engineering, tighter underwriting, and clear tradeoffs.
  • Preferred equity and mezz fill gaps without overpaying for short-term capital.
  • C-PACE can lower net capital cost and improve project IRR in many deals.
  • We provide comparative cost analysis and execution support from term sheet to close.
  • The long-form piece will map fundamentals to real execution and proof points.

Why Florida CRE and Multifamily Deals Need Smarter Capital Right Now

Market shocks in insurance and construction have created a new financing reality for developers and investors. Rising premiums, stubborn construction pricing, and rate volatility compress pro formas and shrink lender appetite.

Insurance, construction costs, and rates squeezing pro formas

Insurance premium spikes raise operating cost and lower DSCR, which cuts senior loan proceeds. Construction pricing volatility forces larger contingencies and higher equity checks for many projects.

Why senior debt + common equity leaves a gap

Higher debt service sensitivity from rising interest rates reduces loan sizing. Lender limits plus investor return hurdles create a missing middle tranche, so traditional debt and equity no longer cover total capital need.

What “competitive” means to lenders, investors, and sponsors

Lenders want durable coverage and clear controls. Investors demand risk-adjusted yield. Sponsors need flexibility to execute and refinance. The strategic goal is to lower weighted average cost of capital while keeping workable terms.

“A pragmatic stack balances cost, control, and refinancing runway so projects can reach stabilization.”

A busy urban landscape showcasing the multifamily financing market in Florida. In the foreground, diverse professionals in business attire discuss financial plans, surrounded by blueprints and charts, representing strategic collaborations. In the middle ground, a modern multifamily residential building is depicted with sleek architecture, reflecting the dynamic real estate market. The background features the vibrant Florida skyline, clear blue skies, and palm trees, symbolizing growth and opportunity. Include the Thorne CRE logo subtly in the background. Use natural sunlight to create a warm and optimistic atmosphere, elevating the mood of collaboration and innovation. The angle should be slightly elevated, capturing the essence of a thriving investment scene in the multifamily sector.

Pressure Point Effect on Deals Stakeholder Concern
Insurance premiums Higher Opex, lower DSCR Lender underwriting & loan size
Construction volatility Bigger contingencies, delayed timelines Sponsor capital calls
Interest rate swings Smaller senior loans, higher debt service Investor return and refinance risk

Before choosing preferred equity, mezzanine debt, or C-PACE, sponsors should model tradeoffs and optimize to reduce weighted average capital. For a deeper walkthrough, see our guide on navigating the capital stack.

Florida Capital Stack Fundamentals for Commercial Property Owners and Developers

A clear capital order and lien priority determine how value and losses flow across a deal.

Capital stack describes the payment order: senior mortgage first, then mezzanine or preferred, then common equity. Lien position and lender rights drive pricing and available proceeds for each tranche.

Senior loan basics

Senior loan underwriting centers on NOI durability, DSCR, and LTV/LTC limits. Lenders demand reserves, reporting, and mortgage covenants that limit sponsor flexibility.

Owner and sponsor obligations

Property owners and sponsor entities often provide completion guarantees, completion obligations, and periodic reporting. Those commitments change lender comfort and loan size.

Equity and gap capital

Sponsor equity and equity investors differ on promote, preferred return, and exit timing. Gap capital sits between senior debt and common equity and carries higher pricing for greater risk.

A visually compelling capital stack illustration set in a dynamic Florida cityscape, showcasing three distinct layers of financing: equity, mezzanine debt, and senior debt. In the foreground, professional business figures in suits, engaged in a discussion, representing developers and investors. In the middle ground, a transparent block diagram accurately depicting the capital stack layers, color-coded for clarity, with labels indicating each layer’s role. The background features a bright Florida skyline with vibrant blue skies and contemporary multifamily buildings, symbolizing growth and opportunity. Soft natural lighting highlights the scene, creating a positive, optimistic atmosphere. Include the brand name "Thorne CRE" subtly integrated into the capital stack design without any text overlays or identifiers that disrupt the visual flow.

Tranche Priority Typical feature
Senior mortgage 1st lien Lowest rate, strict covenants
Mezzanine / Preferred 2nd tier Higher yield, hybrid terms
Common equity Last Upside focus, highest risk

Structure should match project risk, lease-up timelines, insurance exposure, and exit plan (sale, refinance, or hold). The right blend reduces weighted average capital cost and aligns investor returns with realistic terms.

Where Preferred Equity and Mezzanine Debt Help—and Where They Hurt

Gap capital like preferred equity and mezzanine can rescue a deal when senior mortgage proceeds shrink. They let sponsors avoid immediate dilution of common equity and close quickly to preserve timelines.

However, cost is a real constraint. Double-digit pricing on mezzanine and preferred equity pushes the weighted average cost of capital higher. That reduces IRR and forces optimistic rent or exit-cap assumptions to compensate.

Cost and deal feasibility

High interest or yield increases ongoing payment pressure and raises refinance risk. Projects with thin margin cannot absorb sustained double-digit terms without changing the business plan.

Covenants, control, and payment structures

Investors commonly require cash-management triggers, performance tests, consent rights, and remedies. Those provisions limit sponsor flexibility and can trigger expensive cures or defaults.

Payment options matter. Current-pay interest eases accrual but pressures cash flow. PIK or accrual features preserve near-term liquidity yet compound balances and complicate refinancing.

Intercreditor dynamics and sensible use cases

Mezzanine lien position and intercreditor terms — cure rights, standstill, and foreclosure mechanics — dictate how the mezzanine interacts with the mortgage lender.

When mezzanine or preferred equity still makes sense: short-duration bridge needs, speed-to-close, or limited qualifying scope for alternatives. Investors may require extra protections when exit timing is uncertain.

A sophisticated financial conference scene in a modern office environment focusing on preferred equity and mezzanine debt. In the foreground, a group of diverse professionals dressed in business attire gather around a sleek glass table covered with financial reports and charts, engaging in serious discussion. In the middle ground, a digital screen displays a vibrant graphical representation of capital stacks, illustrating the balance between preferred equity and mezzanine debt, with a backdrop of city skyline through large windows. The lighting is warm and professional, creating a focused atmosphere, with soft overhead lights mingling with natural daylight. The image conveys a sense of collaboration and strategy within the finance sector, as visualized by the logo "Thorne CRE" subtly integrated into the design of the meeting room.

Feature Benefit Drawback
Preferred equity Quicker close, non-mortgage lien High yield, limited control for sponsor
Mezzanine debt Preserves common equity upside Second-tier lien, complex intercreditor terms
Payment structures PIK preserves cash Accrual increases refinance burden

Bottom line: preferred equity and mezzanine can bridge funding gaps, but sponsors should model the cost, covenants, and intercreditor effects. That analysis sets up why C-PACE can be a lower-cost alternative and reduce reliance on expensive mezzanine or preferred tranches.

C-PACE Financing as a Capital Stack Advantage in Florida

C-PACE converts eligible improvement costs into a multi-decade assessment repaid through annual property taxes. It is a voluntary tax financing tool, not a conventional mortgage loan. That distinction matters when placing a new tranche inside an existing capital stack.

A modern office environment showcasing a diverse group of professionals discussing C-PACE financing strategies. In the foreground, a confident African-American woman in professional attire gestures towards a digital presentation on a large screen, illustrating capital stack benefits. The middle ground features a thoughtful Hispanic man analyzing financial documents on a sleek conference table, with a view of vibrant Florida skyscrapers through a large window bathed in natural light. In the background, the Thorne CRE logo is subtly displayed on a wall. The mood is collaborative and focused, emphasizing innovation and financial growth, with a warm, inviting atmosphere enhanced by soft lighting.

How it works and why lenders accept it

Repayment is billed with property tax, creating predictable long-term payments that match asset useful life.

Key features: fixed-rate, typically non-recourse to the owner, and non-accelerating — only missed annual payment becomes delinquent.

Funding scope and lender comfort

  • C-PACE can fund up to 100% of eligible hard and soft costs for qualifying improvements.
  • Senior lenders often accept a priority assessment when non-acceleration and limited delinquency risk are documented.
  • It preserves sponsor equity and lets loans and mortgage proceeds focus on non-eligible scope.

Resiliency and eligible measures

After Senate Bill 770, eligible measures now include flood mitigation, storm hardening, wind resistance, and wastewater/septic-to-sewer conversions. These upgrades reduce insurance pressure and project risk.

Feature Benefit Note
Long-term fixed payment Matches useful life Improves underwriting
Non-recourse Limits owner liability Secured by property tax
100% eligible funding Preserves equity Reduces reliance on mezz or debt

Bottom line: adding a C-PACE tranche can lower overall cost of capital, preserve upside for owners and developers, and make commercial property underwriting more durable.

Best-Fit Use Cases for C-PACE in Multifamily and CRE Projects

C-PACE often unlocks funding options that shrink expensive gap financing on ground-up and rehab projects. Below are practical scenarios where assessment financing improves project feasibility and preserves sponsor equity.

New construction and construction gap replacement

When senior loan proceeds fall short, mezzanine or preferred equity fills the gap. Using assessment financing for eligible systems lets developers reduce or replace costly mezzanine debt and preferred equity. That lowers the overall capital cost and improves the project IRR.

Condo development using five-plus-unit commercial property rules

Multifamily with five or more units qualifies as commercial property for many programs. Developers can layer assessment financing during construction and structure releases or paydowns as units sell to protect mortgage underwriting and buyer marketability.

Value-add renovations and resiliency upgrades

Use C-PACE to fund energy efficiency, flood mitigation, and storm hardening so equity and senior loan proceeds cover acquisition and interior finishes. This preserves sponsor flexibility and reduces ongoing operating cost for the property.

Retroactive recapitalization and trapped capital

Many programs allow look-back financing (commonly 2–3 years) to recapitalize qualifying improvements already completed. That unlocks trapped capital for distribution to equity investors, pay down higher-cost debt, or seed the next project.

  • Stakeholder note: equity investors often expect recap proceeds to be deployed to improve returns or reduce leverage.
  • Underwriting limits: qualifying scope, savings-to-investment tests, lender consent, and timing will shape sizing and terms.
Use Case Primary Benefit Constraint
New construction Reduces mezzanine need Lender consent, timing
Condo development Maintains buyer marketability Unit release mechanics
Value-add renovations Preserves equity Eligible scope rules
Retro recap Unlocks trapped capital Look-back window

Selecting the right use case is about aligning cost, risk, and flexibility with the project business plan and market conditions.

How We Build and Optimize Your Capital Stacks from Term Sheet to Close

We translate financing goals into a clear execution plan that aligns lenders, investors, and construction teams. This approach turns a term sheet into a financeable roadmap that protects sponsor upside and limits late-stage surprises.

Capital planning and underwriting

We model senior debt capacity, equity needs, and the C-PACE tranche to reduce weighted average capital without breaking lender constraints. Our underwriting tests mortgage coverage, reserves, and how the assessment payment affects cash flow.

Stakeholder coordination

We secure lender consent, coordinate with the C-PACE provider and program administrator, and manage local approvals. Clear sequencing avoids closing delays and protects mortgage terms.

Scope, terms, and execution

We map construction budgets to qualifying improvements to maximize proceeds while supporting the project plan.

Negotiation priorities include fixed vs. floating exposure, interest rate and amortization, prepayment flexibility, and timing that matter to closing mechanics.

Documentation and risk management

Our team drives applications, engineering reports, legal docs, and consents through milestone checklists. We anticipate lender questions on lien position and non-acceleration and deliver the analysis needed to avoid late surprises.

Result: a coherent real estate capital stack that is financeable, executable, and aligned with sponsor and investor objectives.

Real-World Proof Points and Market Momentum for C-PACE in Florida

Major transactions now include assessment financing as a core tranche alongside traditional loans and credit facilities. That shift shows assessment financing is no longer a niche tool but a viable element in large real estate capital plans.

Case example: Driftwood Capital’s Cocoa Beach transaction

Deal breakdown: Driftwood secured $207M for the 502-key Westin Cocoa Beach Resort & Spa. The mix included a $70M senior construction loan from City National Bank of Florida, a $50M credit line from Amerant Bank, and $137M of C-PACE provided by Bayview PACE.

This shows how assessment financing can sit beside a senior loan and other facilities to fund a single project at scale.

Market signals and lender behavior

Industry reporting notes assessment lending reached about $2B in 2024, and large partnerships (for example, institutional providers syndicating capacity) are expanding liquidity.

Banks are growing more comfortable as they learn lien mechanics and non-acceleration terms. That reduced perceived risk helps mortgage underwriters accept assessment liens more often.

Sponsor takeaways

  • Feasibility: assessment financing can improve deal viability versus costly gap funding.
  • Blended cost: sponsors may lower overall capital by replacing portions of mezzanine with long-term assessment financing.
  • Execution: growing investor partnerships and lender acceptance make assessment tranches easier to underwrite and close.

“These proof points are the patterns we model and execute for clients to preserve upside and reduce funding risk.”

Conclusion

Sponsors now need engineered financing that balances long-term costs and near-term closing needs.

Building a competitive capital stack requires more than senior debt and common equity. Preferred equity and mezzanine can close gaps, but their pricing and covenants often reduce flexibility and raise refinancing pressure.

C-PACE offers a long-term, assessment-based repayment that funds resiliency and efficiency work while preserving sponsor upside and easing mortgage underwriting. That combination can lower blended capital and improve investor return.

Want to evaluate your current stack and identify better tranches or timing? Review strategies to secure the best possible rate and contact us to map an estate capital stack tailored to your property and return goals.

FAQ

What is a competitive capital stack for multifamily and commercial real estate deals?

A competitive stack balances senior loan, equity, and gap capital so projects meet underwriting, timing, and return targets. It typically starts with a senior mortgage, includes sponsor equity and outside investors, and layers gap financing such as mezzanine debt or preferred equity when needed. The goal is to minimize weighted average cost of capital while preserving lender comfort and sponsor upside.

Why are multifamily and CRE sponsors feeling funding pressure now?

Rising insurance premiums, higher construction costs, and interest-rate volatility squeeze cash flow forecasts and push up required returns. Traditional senior debt plus common equity often leaves a funding shortfall between available senior leverage and owner equity capacity, creating demand for creative gap solutions that bridge timing and cost gaps.

How does senior debt differ from mezzanine debt and preferred equity?

Senior loans hold first lien and tight underwriting controls, including DSCR, LTV, and lender covenants. Mezzanine debt sits behind senior debt and is typically secured at the ownership-entity level rather than on the property lien, carrying higher interest and default remedies. Preferred equity ranks above common equity, pays priority distributions, and may include control rights; it sits between debt and common equity in economics but often lacks lien protection.

When should a sponsor choose preferred equity over mezzanine debt?

Choose preferred equity when sponsors need flexibility on cash sweeps, payment deferral, or equity-like covenants that avoid lien subordination issues. Preferred equity suits owners willing to trade a share of upside or fixed preferred returns for less rigid default remedies. Mezzanine fits when lenders want clearer repayment schedules and enforceable remedies tied to ownership interests.

What are the main risks of using gap capital like mezzanine or preferred equity?

Gap capital often carries double-digit pricing, tighter covenants, and potential control triggers on default. These terms can reduce operational flexibility and dilute sponsor economics. Sponsors must weigh higher cost against deal feasibility and ensure exit assumptions can support payment obligations without jeopardizing lender relationships.

How does a project’s exit strategy influence stack structure and terms?

Exit timing and value assumptions shape acceptable leverage, pricing, and term lengths for gap capital. Shorter, confident exits may justify higher-cost mezzanine for a limited period; longer holds favor instruments with amortization matching cash flow. Lenders and investors will stress-test exits to set covenants, prepayment rights, and maturity profiles.

What is C-PACE financing and how does it fit into a capital stack?

C-PACE is a voluntary financing mechanism repaid via a property tax assessment that funds energy, resiliency, and efficiency improvements. It offers long-term, fixed-rate, non-recourse capital with repayment profiles that can extend beyond typical loan terms. As a tranche, it can replace expensive gap capital or senior-level short-term debt when improvements qualify and senior lenders accept lien priority.

What benefits does C-PACE offer compared with mezzanine debt or preferred equity?

C-PACE typically provides lower WACC because of long terms and fixed rates, reduces immediate equity outlay, and improves project cash flow. It’s often non-accelerating and non-recourse to sponsors, which preserves ownership flexibility. When senior lenders accept priority or contractual subordination, C-PACE can materially lower overall financing costs.

Are there downsides or limits to using C-PACE?

C-PACE applies only to qualified improvements and requires alignment with program administrators and local taxing authorities. Some lenders initially resist priority assessments, which necessitates negotiation and documentation. Also, assessment liens attach to the property tax roll, so projects must manage repayment obligations alongside operating expenses.

How do lenders evaluate the addition of C-PACE or other gap tranches?

Lenders assess lien priority, impact on DSCR and LTV, and remedy mechanics. They require clear legal structures, subordination or non-disturbance agreements when needed, and evidence that financed improvements increase property value or resiliency. Proper disclosure, covenant alignment, and coordinated counsel help secure lender comfort.

What underwriting priorities should sponsors focus on when optimizing a capital stack?

Sponsors should prioritize realistic pro formas, conservative exit assumptions, contingency for construction overruns, and alignment between debt amortization and projected cash flows. Securing senior lender consent early, sizing equity to preserve incentives, and structuring gap capital with clear payment and control terms reduces execution risk.

How can sponsors reduce weighted average cost of capital (WACC) across a stack?

Reduce WACC by combining lower-cost long-term instruments, like C-PACE when eligible, with appropriately sized senior debt and targeted equity. Negotiate amortization, prepayment terms, and fixed rates, and choose gap capital that adds value rather than simply covering shortfalls. Efficient tax and insurance planning also improves cash flow and lowers effective capital costs.

What documentation and stakeholder coordination matter most during close?

Key items include senior loan agreements, subordination or non-disturbance agreements for C-PACE, mezzanine or preferred equity term sheets, construction contracts, and proof of eligible improvements. Early coordination among senior lenders, C-PACE providers, program administrators, and local governments speeds approvals and reduces surprises at funding.

How do market signals affect availability and pricing of mezzanine and preferred equity?

Market volume, interest-rate trends, and lender comfort with lien mechanics drive pricing and appetite. As institutional partners and banks gain experience with alternative tranches and assessment financing, pricing can tighten and structures become more standardized, improving access for stable, well-underwritten projects.

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