Start With the Right Question
The right question is not "Can I get a bridge loan?" It is "Do I need one?" A bridge loan exists to solve a specific problem: you want to buy a new home before your current home sells, and doing so without financing help would be impossible or would require making a less competitive offer.
If you can buy the next home with cash you already have in the bank, or if you are in a slow enough market that sellers routinely accept contingent offers, a bridge loan may not add anything to your situation except cost. But if you are in a competitive California market, trying to make a strong offer without it can mean losing homes repeatedly or settling for a property that was not your first choice.
This article looks honestly at the scenarios where a bridge loan delivers real value and the ones where it does not.
Situations Where a Bridge Loan Makes Good Sense
You Found the Right Home
When you find a home you genuinely want to buy and the only thing stopping you is needing to sell first, a bridge loan removes that obstacle cleanly.
The Market is Competitive
In Bay Area, LA, and San Diego markets, contingent offers are routinely passed over. A non-contingent offer backed by bridge financing is treated the same as an all-cash offer in terms of certainty.
You Have Substantial Equity
If your current home has meaningful equity, you are essentially borrowing against money you already have. The bridge loan taps that equity before the sale closes rather than waiting for it.
Your Market Sells Quickly
When homes in your area routinely sell within 30 to 60 days of listing, your bridge loan hold period stays short and your total cost stays modest.
The clearest signal that a bridge loan makes sense is when the cost of carrying it is smaller than the cost of not having it. In a competitive market, losing a home to another buyer is a real outcome. In California, where prices can move significantly within months, waiting around for a contingent offer to work can cost far more than the carry cost of a bridge loan.
Situations Where a Bridge Loan May Not Make Sense
Very Little Equity
If you owe close to what your home is worth, the math may not work. Bridge loans are capped at 65 to 70% LTV, and your existing mortgage balance comes out first. Low equity can leave little left to borrow.
A Slow-Moving Market
If homes in your area sit for 90 to 120 days or more, your carry costs accumulate and the risk of the loan maturing before you sell increases. Plan carefully with realistic local comps.
Tight Cash Flow
Carrying two sets of housing costs is a real burden. If your monthly budget is stretched before you add bridge loan payments, a worse offer or a different timeline may be the sounder plan.
Overpriced Departing Home
A bridge loan assumes your current home will sell. If you insist on pricing above market, a fast sale is unlikely. Realistic pricing is an important part of making a bridge loan work.
What the Alternatives Actually Look Like
Understanding when a bridge loan makes sense also means understanding what you are comparing it to. Here are the real alternatives most California homebuyers consider:
| Alternative | Works When | Problem |
|---|---|---|
| Contingent Offer | Buyers market, motivated seller | Often rejected in competitive markets; weakens negotiating position |
| Sell First, Rent Temporarily | You have time and flexibility | Moving twice, storage costs, pressure to buy quickly under any market |
| HELOC on Departing Home | Home is free and clear or low LTV, slow sale timeline | Most lenders freeze HELOCs when home goes on market; approval can take weeks |
| Cash-Out Refinance | Low existing rate, long-term hold | Ruins existing rate; slow to fund; subject to income qualification |
| Bridge Loan | Competitive market, meaningful equity, realistic sale timeline | Carry cost and monthly payments; not free money |
Each path has costs. The contingent offer path costs you in purchase price or lost offers. Selling first costs you in double moves and temporary housing. The bridge loan costs you in carry fees. The question is which cost is most acceptable given your situation.
A Quick Decision Framework
Here is a simple way to think through whether a bridge loan makes sense for you. Work through each question:
- Do I have at least 30 to 35% equity in my current home? If yes, there is likely enough to make a bridge loan viable. If no, the loan-to-value cap may make it impossible or leave you with too little to borrow.
- Is the market I am buying in competitive? If you need a non-contingent offer to be taken seriously, a bridge loan is working for you from day one. If sellers routinely accept contingent offers, the cost may not be necessary.
- Can I realistically price and sell my current home within 90 days? If yes, your carry cost stays manageable. If your home will take 4 to 6 months to sell at the price you want, build that into your cost estimate and decide if it still makes sense.
- Can I handle two sets of housing costs for three to six months? Bridge loans require monthly payments. You will also likely be paying mortgage, rent, or carrying costs on the new property. Make sure the cash flow works before you commit.
A bridge loan is not free, but neither is losing a home to another buyer or selling before you are ready. Most California borrowers who use bridge financing find the cost well worth what they gained: a non-contingent offer that competed successfully, a home they actually wanted, and a move they controlled on their timeline.
When to Call a Lender
The right time to talk to a bridge lender is before you make an offer, not after you have already been outbid twice. A conversation costs nothing. A pre-approval letter typically issues within 24 hours and does not commit you to anything.
North Coast Financial has been funding California bridge loans since 1981. We can tell you in a single conversation whether your situation is a good fit, what your borrowing range looks like, and what the all-in cost would be for your expected hold period. There is no obligation to proceed.