What Makes a Non-Contingent Offer So Powerful
When a California listing agent presents offers to a seller, the first thing they look at after price is contingencies. A financing contingency means the deal can fall apart if the buyer's loan doesn't come through. A sale contingency means the deal can fall apart if the buyer's current home doesn't sell in time. Sellers don't want either of those risks sitting between them and a closed transaction.
A non-contingent offer removes both of those escape hatches. It tells the seller that this buyer is committed, that the money is already arranged, and that the deal will close. That kind of certainty is worth real money to a motivated seller.
What sellers and listing agents actually see
In a multiple-offer situation in the Bay Area, Los Angeles, Orange County, or San Diego, a listing agent presenting offers to a seller will often frame the field like this: here are the contingent offers, and here are the non-contingent offers. The non-contingent offers get serious consideration first, regardless of where they fall on price. A well-priced non-contingent offer frequently beats a higher contingent one because the seller is essentially comparing apples and oranges: certainty versus uncertainty.
California sellers in competitive markets routinely accept non-contingent offers that are 5 to 10 percent below the highest contingent bid. They are not leaving money on the table; they are paying for certainty of close. Understanding this is what separates buyers who win homes from buyers who lose them.
The 72-hour kick-out clause problem
Even when a seller accepts a contingent offer, they often protect themselves with a 72-hour kick-out clause. If a better non-contingent offer comes in during the contingency period, the seller can notify you and give you just 72 hours to remove your contingencies or lose the deal. In a fast-moving California market, 72 hours is rarely enough time to sell your current home. The kick-out clause turns an accepted offer into a time bomb.
With a bridge loan pre-approval in hand, you walk into every offer situation with the ability to go non-contingent from the start. No kick-out clause risk. No 72-hour scramble. A clean offer on your first submission.
How a Bridge Loan Enables a Clean Offer
The mechanics are straightforward. A residential bridge loan draws on the equity in your current California home and makes those funds available to purchase your next one. Because the money is committed and the pre-approval is in writing, you do not need to attach a financing contingency or a sale contingency to your offer. The seller sees a buyer who is ready to close.
What the pre-approval letter does for you
North Coast Financial issues a pre-approval letter within 24 hours of your inquiry. Your agent attaches that letter to the purchase offer. It communicates to the listing agent that a licensed California private lender has reviewed your equity position and committed to funding the loan. In most California markets, agents on the sell side recognize North Coast Financial letters and know what they mean: this offer is real.
How the offer looks to the seller's side
From the seller's perspective, a bridge-loan-backed non-contingent offer is functionally indistinguishable from a cash offer in terms of deal certainty. The buyer is not waiting on a bank underwriter. There is no financing contingency that can be invoked. The timeline of 2 to 2.5 weeks to close for owner-occupied properties is known and dependable. Sellers can plan their next move around a concrete close date.
Which California Markets Benefit Most
Non-contingent offers matter everywhere in California, but they are essentially required in certain markets and price brackets. Here is how the dynamics play out across the four regions we serve most actively.
The most cash-heavy buyer pool in the US
Tech equity, all-cash buyers, and institutional investors make the Peninsula, South Bay, and East Bay among the most competitive markets in the country. Contingent offers rarely make it past the first review.
Westside and SGV move fast
The Westside, San Gabriel Valley, and coastal submarkets see multiple non-contingent offers on well-priced properties within days. Move-up buyers in these areas almost always need a bridge loan to compete.
Non-contingent is the baseline expectation
In Irvine, Newport Beach, and Huntington Beach, listing agents routinely advise sellers to wait for non-contingent offers before accepting anything. A contingent offer from a financed buyer is at a structural disadvantage.
Coastal and military markets move with urgency
Coastal San Diego and areas near military installations attract buyers with hard deadlines. A bridge loan gives relocating buyers the speed and certainty to compete in a market that does not wait.
What You Need to Qualify
Qualifying for a bridge loan pre-approval is simpler than most people expect. We are a direct private lender, and our underwriting is asset-based. What we care about is the equity in your current property and the strength of your exit plan, not the depth of your income documentation.
What we require
- Significant equity in your current California home. We lend up to 65 to 70% LTV. The more equity you have relative to your outstanding mortgage, the stronger your scenario.
- A marketable current property. We look at location, condition, and a realistic estimate of time to sell. Most California properties in established neighborhoods qualify without difficulty.
- A clear exit strategy. For buy-before-you-sell borrowers, that means listing the current home and selling it after moving into the new one. We review this upfront and want the plan to be realistic.
What we do not require
- Two years of tax returns or W-2 income verification
- A qualifying debt-to-income ratio
- A signed purchase agreement on your current home
- A buyer already under contract for your existing property
- A specific credit score minimum (past credit issues are not automatic disqualifiers)
Self-employed borrowers, retirees, and anyone with complex income sources qualify regularly. We underwrite on the asset, not the income statement.
To get your pre-approval letter, all we need is an estimate of your current home's value, your outstanding mortgage balance, and your target property details if available. No documents are required at this stage. Call or email us and we can have the letter ready within one business day.
What It Costs and How Fast You Can Close
We publish our pricing openly because we think borrowers deserve real numbers before they decide. A bridge loan is a short-term tool, and the total cost depends on the rate, points, and how quickly your current home sells. Most North Coast Financial borrowers are paid off within 90 days.
| Cost Component | What to Expect |
|---|---|
| Interest Rate | 9.95% to 10.95% (APR 11.40% to 13.22%) depending on LTV, property type, and loan amount |
| Origination Points | 1.25 to 1.95 points at closing (one point equals 1% of the loan amount) |
| Monthly Payment | Required throughout the loan term, calculated on the outstanding balance |
| prepayment penalty | None. Pay off early and you owe nothing extra. |
| Maximum Loan Term | 11 months |
The funding timeline for owner-occupied California bridge loans
Owner-occupied bridge loans fund in 2 to 2.5 weeks from application. Federal TRID regulations impose mandatory disclosure windows on owner-occupied residential loans, and that is what drives the minimum timeline. Any lender claiming a faster close on an owner-occupied property should be asked specifically how they clear the TRID requirements.
Investment property bridge loans close in 5 to 7 days. There are no mandatory waiting periods for non-owner-occupied transactions.
How the cost stacks up against the alternative
The honest comparison is not between bridge loan cost and no cost. The comparison is between bridge loan cost and the cost of competing with a contingency attached. California sellers in strong markets discount contingent offers by 5 to 10 percent on average. On a $1.5 million home, that discount is $75,000 to $150,000. Bridge loan costs are real and finite. The contingency discount is also real, and often larger.