Surprising fact: nearly 40% of manufactured housing communities in the U.S. change hands or re-capitalize within a decade, a scale that reshapes local housing markets and investor strategies.
This buyer’s guide explains how commercial mortgages for these communities work, why they are treated as income-producing real estate, and when owners choose to refinance or exit.
A typical business model leases pads while residents own their homes, and common assets—roads, utilities, community areas—serve as collateral. That mix changes underwriting, appraisal, and the view lenders take of risk.
Owners and investors reading this will learn when to pursue a cash-out loan, how to prepare for lender scrutiny, and how timing affects sale proceeds. We also preview lender types—banks, credit unions, private capital, and agency-style options—and why the right fit depends on documentation and timeline.
Key Takeaways
- These communities are financed as commercial properties, not single-unit mortgages.
- Lease-pad models affect collateral and underwriting priorities.
- Refinance vs. exit choices tie to operations, capital needs, and timing.
- Different lenders suit different goals: stability, speed, or flexible underwriting.
- Proper loan structure and preparation minimize friction and protect value.
Clarifying Your Refinance or Exit Goal in Today’s Market
Decide first what you want the property to do for you. Do you need better cash flow, lower rates, or capital for repairs? Or is this the moment to monetize equity while buyer demand is strong?
When refinancing makes sense:
- Rate-and-term relief or a new loan to extend a maturing mortgage.
- Cash-out to fund infrastructure that protects long-term income.
- Resizing debt after NOI growth to improve returns.
When an exit is wiser:
- Value looks peaked relative to operations and the local market.
- Income is volatile or deferred maintenance dampens returns.
- Strong buyer demand promises a premium sale.
What lenders and buyers review: occupancy trends, rent rolls, collection history, utility and road condition, on-site management, and clear trailing-12 financials. Good documentation speeds approvals for both loans and sales.
Action checklist: Is the asset stabilized? Are deferred repairs limiting value? What net proceeds do you get after prepayment and closing costs? Answer these before you contact brokers or lenders.

Mobile Home Park Financing Options for Refinancing and Recapitalization
Refinance and recapitalization choices hinge on whether you prioritize proceeds, pace, or repayment flexibility.
Conventional and agency-style programs
When performance is stable and reporting is clean, conventional and agency programs usually offer the best pricing. Expect longer amortization, lower rates, and the ability to access up to ~80% LTV on acquisitions for larger deals.
SBA and bank paths
SBA 7(a) and bank loans suit owner-operators seeking lower outlays and predictable terms. SBA 7(a) can reach roughly 75% LTV for purchase or refinance. Banks often require detailed operating history and strong management.

Private and hard money options
Private credit and hard money close fast and fit distressed or turnaround plays. Typical private cash-out: ~65% LTV, ~12% interest, ~3 points, and 12–24 month terms. Hard-money starts higher—often ~8%+—with short repay windows.
Cash-out vs. second liens; structure benchmarks
Cash-out refinancing simplifies the stack and may lower blended cost. A second mortgage can be faster for urgent repairs or infrastructure work.
| Program | Common LTV | Term / Amortization |
|---|---|---|
| Agency / Conventional | 70–80% | 5–12 yrs / 30-yr amort |
| SBA / Bank | up to 75% | mid-single-digit yrs / varies |
| Private / Hard money | 55–75% | 12–24 months / interest-only possible |
| Rehab (LTC) | up to 90% LTC | short-term to stabilize |
Bottom line: the right choice balances proceeds, timeline, and your ability to execute capital projects. Match the debt to the business plan, not just to the maximum available proceeds.
Lenders, Underwriting, and Closing Timelines Borrowers Should Expect
Credit teams focus on NOI trends, physical asset condition, and borrower track record during diligence. Underwriting blends financial review with property-level inspections. That mix shapes pricing, recourse, and which documentation matters most.

Bank and credit union lending versus non-bank flexibility
Banks and credit unions price conservatively and reward well-maintained homes with lower rates. They favor clean operating histories and simple ownership.
Non-bank lenders and private capital bend rules for transitional assets, complex ownership, or quick closings. Expect higher pricing but faster decisions when standard underwriting stalls.
Major execution channels
Primary channels include balance sheet, CMBS, correspondent, and agency paths (Freddie, Fannie). Each has a focus:
- Balance sheet: speed and lender-specific overlays.
- CMBS: scale and rigid structural tests.
- Correspondent: regional reach with sponsor relationships.
- Agency: competitive pricing, standardized terms, and long amortization.
Key deal terms to negotiate
Negotiate fixed versus floating, index and spread, extension options, and early rate locks. Early locks on fixed-rate loans reduce pricing uncertainty. Confirm whether interest-only amortization is available case-by-case.
Non-recourse is common, but expect standard carve-outs (environmental, fraud, bad acts). Understand what personal liability remains and what the entity shields.
Timelines and a complete application
Institutional closings typically target about 45–60 days from a complete application; private capital can be quicker. Complete means rent roll, trailing-12, borrower financials, entity docs, third-party reports, and a clear capital plan for roads, water, and utilities.
| Execution Channel | Underwriting Focus | Typical Term / LTV |
|---|---|---|
| Agency (Freddie/Fannie) | Standardized reporting, strong occupancy | 3–10 yrs / up to 80% LTV |
| Balance Sheet | Speed, sponsor strength | Flexible terms / case-by-case LTV |
| CMBS | Cash flow stability, structural covenants | 5–10 yrs / competitive LTV |
| Correspondent | Regional knowledge, bank relationships | Varies / often similar to banks |
Preparation checklist to reduce delays
- Assemble rent roll, T12, and bank statements.
- Order soil, environmental, and engineering reports early.
- Document utility and road condition; show capital plan for repairs.
- Clarify ownership entities and provide updated certificates.
- Ask for early rate lock terms and confirm carve-out wording.
Exit Strategies for Mobile Home Park Owners and Investors
Exit planning starts with a clear view of how recent capital work changed net operating income and buyer appeal. That view guides whether you sell for price or preserve affordability through a resident purchase.
Selling after stabilization
Stabilize, then sell means using cash-out refinance proceeds to fix utilities, roads, and common areas. Those projects lift occupancy, protect income, and broaden the buyer pool.
Buyers pay for predictable operations: clean rent rolls, steady collections, durable infrastructure, and professional management that reduce near-term capex risk.
Timing, maturities, and prepayment
Plan sales around loan maturities and prepay terms. Yield maintenance, defeasance, step-downs, or lockouts materially change net proceeds. Run scenarios to compare sale timing against prevailing rates and buyer leverage.

Resident purchase and cooperative conversion
A resident-led purchase can preserve affordability and community stability. Layered capital often makes these deals feasible.
“Public and private participation can turn a sale into long-term ownership for residents.”
Example: a ROC USA-enabled conversion used CHFA HOF ($1,194,800), an Impact Development Fund participation loan ($1,344,150), a $300,000 city affordable housing loan, plus Thistle Communities’ technical services.
- Expect longer timelines, stakeholder alignment, and full condition disclosures.
- Engage specialized lenders and partners early, assemble a co-op feasibility package, and align resident education with the sale process.
For financing and rate strategy guidance, consult partners who help you secure the best possible rate before listing.
Conclusion
Deciding whether to refinance or sell starts with a clear count of cash needs, timeline, and operational capacity. Refinance to boost cash flow and fund repairs, or exit to lock in gains and reduce day-to-day exposure. Each path needs a different loan and execution plan.
Underwriters look for stable occupancy, durable infrastructure, and defensible income. Those elements shorten approvals and improve pricing for mortgage terms and loans.
Match term length, amortization, and prepayment flexibility to your hold period and capital projects. Remember: speed and flexibility often cost more, while lower-cost money demands stronger documentation and condition.
Practical next steps: prepare a lender-ready package, clarify objectives, and compare capital sources before signing term sheets. For help aligning strategy and structure, learn more at about Thorne CRE.



