
Hard money broker compensation is defined as a percentage of the loan amount paid upfront by the borrower, typically structured as points collected at closing. This fee sits alongside lender origination points, processing charges, and interest costs to form the total financing expense on any given deal. For real estate investors and developers, understanding how brokers get paid is not optional. It directly shapes your break-even point, your profit margin, and your ability to compare financing options with clarity. Broker commissions often range from 1% to 3% of the loan amount, with higher percentages reserved for complex or high-risk transactions.
Broker compensation in hard money lending follows a straightforward formula: the broker earns a percentage of the funded loan amount, collected as points at closing. One point equals one percent of the loan. That percentage is the broker’s fee for sourcing the deal, qualifying the borrower, and placing the loan with the right lender.
The standard commission range sits between 1% and 3% of the loan amount. Bridge loans, hard money, and private credit products tend to pay on the higher end of that range, often 2% to 3% or more depending on deal structure. A straightforward fix-and-flip loan with a creditworthy borrower might carry a 1% broker fee. A complex ground-up construction deal with a first-time developer could push that fee to 2.5% or higher.
The math is direct. A 1% commission on a $1,000,000 loan equals $10,000 in broker pay. At 2%, that same loan generates $20,000. At 3%, the broker earns $30,000 at closing. On a $500,000 loan, those same percentages produce $5,000, $10,000, and $15,000 respectively. Knowing these numbers before you sign a term sheet puts you in a far stronger negotiating position.
Pro Tip: Ask your broker to disclose their compensation in writing before you receive a term sheet. Brokers who resist this disclosure are a red flag. Transparency on compensation is a baseline professional standard in private lending.
Broker compensation is only one layer of hard money financing costs. Lenders charge their own set of fees that compound on top of the broker’s commission, and these fees can significantly affect your actual cost of capital.
Typical lender fees in 2026 include origination points of 1.5% to 3.0% of the loan amount, document preparation and processing fees of $500 to $1,500, construction inspection draw fees of $150 to $300 per draw, and extension fees of 1 to 2 points per 60-day extension period. Each of these charges is separate from the broker’s commission.
Additional costs add 2–5 percentage points to the effective cost above the stated interest rate. That gap between the headline rate and the true cost of capital is where many investors miscalculate their deal economics.
| Fee Type | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Broker commission | 1%–3% of loan | Paid at closing by borrower |
| Lender origination points | 1.5%–3.0% of loan | Core lender fee, paid upfront |
| Doc prep / processing | $500–$1,500 flat | Varies by lender |
| Construction draw inspection | $150–$300 per draw | Applies to construction loans |
| Extension fee | 1–2 points per 60 days | Charged if loan term extends |
The combined weight of these fees matters most on shorter loan terms. A 12-month hard money loan carrying a 12% interest rate, 2 origination points, a 1.5% broker fee, and $1,000 in processing fees produces an effective annualized cost well above the stated rate. Hard money interest rates in 2026 average 9.5%–13% with 1.5 to 3 origination points, meaning the total effective cost routinely exceeds the headline rate when all fees are included.
Key cost categories to track on every deal:
Not every deal commands the same broker commission. There is no universal commission percentage in private credit. Compensation shifts based on the difficulty of placing the loan, the speed required, and the risk profile of the borrower or property.
Several factors push broker fees toward the higher end of the range:
Broker compensation can exceed 2%–3% for complex or high-risk deals. That ceiling is not arbitrary. It reflects the real execution demands placed on brokers who specialize in difficult placements. Volume and repeat business work in the opposite direction. A developer who closes four loans per year with the same broker has real leverage to negotiate a lower commission on each deal.
Pro Tip: Evaluate your broker’s incentives alongside the loan terms they present. A broker earning 3% has a financial interest in closing the deal quickly, not necessarily in finding you the lowest total cost. Ask them to show you two or three competing term sheets before you commit.
Broker fees are a direct line item in your project budget. They reduce the capital available for acquisition, renovation, or construction, and they increase the total amount you need to recoup at sale or refinance to break even.
Understanding lender approval criteria also helps you reduce broker dependency over time. Borrowers who know exactly what lenders require can approach direct lenders with confidence, reducing or eliminating broker fees on straightforward deals. The goal is not to avoid brokers entirely. It is to use them deliberately, when their value exceeds their cost.
Hard money broker compensation is a percentage-based fee paid at closing that stacks on top of lender origination points, processing charges, and interest to form the true cost of private financing.
| Point | Details |
|---|---|
| Standard commission range | Broker fees typically run 1%–3% of the loan amount, paid upfront at closing. |
| Total fee impact | Additional lender fees add 2–5 percentage points to effective loan cost above the stated rate. |
| Complexity drives higher fees | Urgent, complex, or high-risk deals can push broker commissions above 3%. |
| Negotiate with volume | Repeat borrowers and larger loan sizes create real leverage to reduce commission percentages. |
| Build fees into underwriting | Include all broker and lender fees in your pro forma before analyzing deal profitability. |
After years of watching real estate investors close hard money deals, the most consistent mistake I see is treating broker compensation as a separate, minor line item rather than as part of a unified financing cost analysis. Investors will spend hours negotiating a renovation contract down by $3,000 and then sign a broker agreement without reading the compensation disclosure.
The market in 2026 has made this more consequential, not less. Borrowers who understand all lender fees and negotiate broker fees alongside loan terms consistently achieve better overall financing costs. That is not a coincidence. It reflects the reality that lenders and brokers have flexibility in how they structure compensation, and that flexibility favors informed borrowers.
The other pattern I see regularly: investors who work with the same broker on every deal without ever questioning whether the commission is still appropriate for the deal type. A broker who earned 2% on your first complex deal three years ago should not automatically earn 2% on a straightforward refinance today. Relationships matter in private lending, but they should not replace analysis.
The best investors I have observed treat broker relationships as partnerships with clear expectations on both sides. They ask for competing term sheets. They read compensation disclosures. They know how to refer clients to a hard money lender directly when the deal is simple enough to not require a broker. That discipline, applied consistently, compounds into meaningful savings across a portfolio.
— Daly Kay DiNatale
Capitalfunding operates as a direct private lender backed by a family office, which means broker compensation and lender fees are transparent from the first conversation. There is no ambiguity about who is charging what or why.
Capitalfunding’s hard money loan programs cover fix-and-flip, ground-up construction, long-term rental, and ultra-luxury single-family projects above $10,000,000. Brokers who partner with Capitalfunding through the broker partnership program receive competitive compensation structures, fast closings measured in days, and direct access to a lending team that has closed over $1 Billion in loans. If you are an investor or developer who wants to understand exactly what your financing will cost before you commit, Capitalfunding is built for that conversation. Please submit your broker fee agreement with the customer and the executive summary of the transaction to CapitalFunding for review.
Hard money broker commissions typically range from .5% to 3% of the funded loan amount, paid at closing. Complex or urgent deals can push that percentage above 3%.
Brokers earn a percentage of the loan amount as points collected at closing, either paid directly by the borrower on the closing statement.
Broker fees can be negotiated, particularly for repeat borrowers, larger loan sizes, or straightforward deals. Broker commissions depend on loan size, risk, and execution demands and are not fixed by regulation.
Lender fees typically include origination points of 1.5%–3.0%, document preparation fees of $500–$1,500, draw inspection fees of $150–$300 each, and extension fees of 1–2 points per 60-day period.
Add the broker commission, lender origination points, all flat fees, and total interest charges to get the true cost. Total effective costs can exceed the headline interest rate by 2–5 percentage points when all fees are included.