You've got the lot, the plans, and the contractor lined up. What you don't have yet is a lender who understands that a ground-up build doesn't get funded the way a regular mortgage does. Here's how construction financing actually works, how draw schedules release your money as the project moves, and what to line up before you break ground.
A ground-up build doesn't work like a purchase. There's no finished asset to appraise on day one, no keys to hand over at closing, and no way for a lender to fund the whole thing upfront and walk away. That's exactly why construction loan financing is structured so differently from a standard mortgage.
Here's what makes this type of financing distinct:
If you're building spec homes, developing infill lots, or adding rental units through ground-up construction, this structure is worth understanding before you assume a bank's standard mortgage process will work the same way. It won't. Real estate construction loans are underwritten around the build itself: the plans, the budget, and your track record delivering similar projects. Investors managing several real estate construction loans at once benefit most, since each project is evaluated on its own merits rather than your combined personal debt load.
This is the part that trips up borrowers who've only dealt with a regular mortgage before. Instead of receiving your full loan amount at closing, you request funds in stages, called draws, as work is completed.
Here's roughly how that process moves:
Because you're only paying interest on funds you've actually drawn, your carrying costs stay lower throughout the build than they would with a lump-sum loan sitting mostly unused in the early months. That's a meaningful difference on a project that might run six to twelve months from foundation to final inspection.
Draw schedules do come with small processing costs, typically a modest wire fee and an inspection fee per draw, so it's worth understanding those upfront rather than being surprised at your first request. You can see exactly how InstaLend's construction loans structure draws, timing, and fees on the product page.
Because construction financing is asset and experience-based, the questions you'll get asked are different from a purchase mortgage. Expect a lender to look at:
What you generally won't need: W-2s, tax returns, or employment verification. Approval centers on whether you can execute the build and whether the finished project's value supports the loan, not on your personal income history.
This matters most for builders and investors who've been turned away by conventional lenders simply because their income doesn't look like a typical W-2 employee's. A licensed contractor or an investor with a completed project or two under their belt is usually in a strong position here, even without a long personal financial file to submit.
It also opens the door for strategies that a conventional lender's underwriting simply isn't built to evaluate. Spec home builds, build-to-rent projects, infill development on a vacant or teardown lot, and small multi-unit or ADU construction all get assessed the same way: on the strength of the plans, the budget, and your ability to execute, not on how the project fits a standardized mortgage template designed for owner-occupied homes.
Not every construction loan works the same way, and picking the wrong structure can cost you time or money you didn't plan on spending.
If you're building to sell, building to rent, or scaling multiple projects at once, an asset-based structure built around your actual build needs will almost always move faster than a conventional path designed for a single owner-occupied build.
Most draw delays aren't the lender's fault, they're avoidable on the borrower's side. A stalled draw doesn't just cost you time, it can stall your crew, push back your timeline, and eat into the margin the whole project was supposed to protect. Watch for these:
The fix for most of these is simple: treat your scope of work like a contract, not a rough estimate, and confirm your lender's draw process before you're standing on-site waiting for a wire.
Not every lender that offers residential construction loans operates the same way, and the differences show up exactly when you're mid-build and need funds released fast. Before you commit, ask:
A lender that specializes in ground-up lending will understand milestone-based funding in a way a generalist bank simply doesn't. That specialization tends to matter more at draw time than a slightly better advertised rate, because a stalled draw can stall your entire crew.
If you're comparing options, InstaLend's new construction loans page walks through current terms, eligible states, and how the draw process works from first submission to final inspection.
Good construction loan financing is built around how a project actually gets built: in stages, with funds tied to real progress, not a bank's fixed disbursement schedule. Whether you're a licensed contractor, a spec builder, or an investor developing infill lots, the right lender should understand milestone-based draws well enough to keep your project moving instead of slowing it down.
If you're ready to see what that looks like for your next build, take a look at how InstaLend structures its construction loans and what it takes to get pre-approved.
What's the difference between a construction loan and a regular mortgage?
A regular mortgage funds a finished property in one lump sum. Construction financing releases funds in stages as the build progresses, since there's no completed asset to lend against on day one.
Do I need construction experience to qualify?
Most asset-based lenders look for a GC license or documented prior experience completing similar projects, since the build itself is part of what's being underwritten.
How does interest work during construction?
Most construction loans charge interest only on the funds you've actually drawn, not the full loan amount, which keeps carrying costs lower during the early phases of a build.
Can I use a construction loan for a rental property I plan to hold long-term?
Yes. Many investors use ground-up financing to build a rental property, then refinance into a long-term loan once construction is complete and the property is leased.
What happens if my project runs over budget?
This depends on your lender's change-order process, which is exactly why it's worth understanding how budget increases are documented and approved before you're mid-build with a shortfall.
Can I finance an ADU or a small multi-unit property with a construction loan?
Many asset-based lenders cover accessory dwelling units and small multi-unit builds alongside single-family projects, so it's worth confirming unit-count limits before you finalize plans.
See your loan amount, draw structure, and terms, based on your project, not a generic template.
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