Why These Questions Matter

California's private lending market includes a wide range of lenders, from long-established DRE-licensed firms with decades of funded loans to less experienced operators whose terms, disclosures, and reliability vary significantly. A bridge loan is a short-term but substantial transaction. You are placing your home equity and your home purchase timeline in a lender's hands. Knowing what to ask before you commit is how you protect yourself.

The questions below are designed to surface the information that matters most: licensing, costs, timeline, and track record. A good lender answers all of them clearly and promptly. Evasive or vague answers to any of these are a meaningful signal.

Question 1

Are you licensed to make real estate loans in California?

Any person arranging or making real estate loans in California must hold a current California DRE Broker license or an NMLS license. Ask for the license number and verify it yourself at dre.ca.gov or nmlsconsumeraccess.org. Do not skip this step.

Good answer: "Yes. Our DRE Broker license number is [number] and our NMLS ID is [number]. You can verify both at any time."
Question 2

What is the exact interest rate, and how is it calculated?

Bridge loan rates in California currently run from roughly 9.95% to 10.95% (APR 11.40% to 13.22%) for standard residential transactions. Ask whether the rate is simple interest on the outstanding balance or calculated another way. Monthly payments are required.

Good answer: "Our rate is [X]% annual, calculated as simple interest on the outstanding balance. Your monthly payment would be [amount]."
Question 3

How many points will I pay, and what are all closing costs?

Points should be disclosed upfront, not buried in a term sheet delivered the day before closing. Ask for a complete written cost estimate that includes points, title insurance, escrow, recording, and any other fees. Reputable lenders provide this without hesitation.

Good answer: "Points are [X] on this loan. I can send you a complete fee estimate in writing today so you have every number before you decide."
Question 4

Is there a prepayment penalty?

Some private lenders charge a minimum interest period or prepayment fee that means you pay for months you did not use. Ask this question directly and get the answer in writing. North Coast Financial charges no prepayment penalty.

Good answer: "No. There is no prepayment penalty. If you sell your home in 45 days, you pay 45 days of interest and nothing more."
Question 5

How long will it take to close my loan?

Owner-occupied bridge loans in California are subject to government regulations that set a minimum timeline of 2 to 2.5 weeks. Investment property loans can close in 5 to 7 days. Any lender claiming they can close an owner-occupied loan in three days is either mistaken or taking shortcuts with disclosure requirements.

Good answer: "For an owner-occupied property, we typically fund in 2 to 2.5 weeks due to required disclosure waiting periods. Investment properties close in 5 to 7 days."
Question 6

What is the maximum LTV you offer?

Standard California residential bridge loans go up to 65 to 70% LTV. Some lenders advertise higher numbers but add conditions that reduce the effective loan amount. Get the maximum LTV in writing and confirm how the existing mortgage balance factors into the calculation.

Good answer: "Up to 65 to 70% of current market value, minus your existing mortgage balance. Here is the exact calculation for your situation."
Question 7

Do you require an appraisal?

Traditional appraisals add $500 to $1,000 in cost and 1 to 2 weeks to the timeline. Many private bridge lenders, including North Coast Financial, do not require a formal appraisal and use other valuation methods instead. Confirm this upfront so there are no unexpected fees or delays.

Good answer: "We do not order or require a formal appraisal. We use other valuation methods, which saves both the fee and the scheduling time."
Question 8

What is the maximum loan term?

North Coast Financial offers terms up to 11 months. Some lenders limit terms to six months, which may not give you enough runway if your sale takes longer than expected. Know the maximum before you commit.

Good answer: "Our maximum term is 11 months. That said, the goal is to sell and pay off the loan in 60 to 120 days. The 11 months is your safety net."
Question 9

How many bridge loans have you closed in California?

Experience matters. A lender who has funded hundreds of California bridge loans understands the specific regulatory requirements, title nuances, and market dynamics. Ask specifically about California residential bridge loans, not just overall loan volume.

Good answer: "Our broker has funded over $1 billion in private money loans in California since 1981. Bridge loans are a core part of our business."
Question 10

Can I speak with a past borrower?

References are a reasonable request for a transaction of this size. An established lender with satisfied borrowers should be willing to connect you with past clients who can speak to the experience. Online reviews and testimonials are also worth researching independently.

Good answer: "Absolutely. I can connect you with past borrowers who have completed similar transactions. Let me reach out to a few and see who is willing to take a call."
North Coast Financial's Answers

Licensed: DRE Broker #01870870, NMLS ID 323044. Rate range: 9.95 to 10.95% (APR 11.40% to 13.22%). Points: 1.25 to 1.95. No prepayment penalty. No appraisal fee. Owner-occupied: 2 to 2.5 weeks. Investment: 5 to 7 days. LTV: up to 65 to 70%. Term: up to 11 months. Track record: over $1 billion funded since 1981.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Any person or company making or arranging real estate loans in California must hold a valid DRE Broker license or a NMLS license. You can verify a lender's license status on the DRE website (dre.ca.gov) or through the NMLS Consumer Access portal. North Coast Financial holds DRE Broker #01870870 and NMLS ID 323044.
Key questions include: Are you licensed in California? What is the exact interest rate and how is it calculated? How much are your points? What are all closing costs? Is there a prepayment penalty? How long will the loan take to close? What is the maximum LTV? Do you require an appraisal? What is the maximum loan term? And: how many bridge loans have you closed, and can I speak with a past borrower?
Visit the California Department of Real Estate website at dre.ca.gov and use the License Status Check tool to verify a DRE Broker license. For NMLS licenses, visit nmlsconsumeraccess.org. Always confirm the license is current and active before proceeding.
Transparent from Day One

We give you straight answers before you apply

Every question on this list has a clear answer at North Coast Financial. Ask us anything.

Questions? contact@northcoastfinancialinc.com