Loan‑to‑Value (LTV): How Investors Measure Leverage and Lending Risk

Loan‑to‑Value (LTV) measures the percentage of a property’s value that is financed through debt. Investors use LTV to understand leverage, compare loan options, and evaluate how lenders assess risk. A lower LTV means more equity and lower risk; a higher LTV means more leverage and potentially higher returns — but also higher lender scrutiny.

What Is Loan to Value (LTV)?

Loan‑to‑Value (LTV) is the ratio between the loan amount and the property’s appraised value or purchase price. It shows how much of the property is financed with borrowed money.

Lenders use LTV to determine loan eligibility, interest rates, and required down payments. Investors use LTV to understand leverage and financing structure.

Loan to Value (LTV) Formula

The LTV formula is:

LTV = (Loan Amount ÷ Property Value) × 100

This formula expresses the financed portion of the property as a percentage.

Real-World Example

Purchase Price: $400,000
Loan Amount: $300,000

LTV = ($300,000 ÷ $400,000) × 100
LTV = 75%

This means the investor is financing 75% of the property’s value and putting 25% down.

What Is a Good Loan to Value (LTV)?

Typical LTV ranges vary by loan type:

  • Conventional investment loans: 70%–80%
  • Commercial loans: 65%–75%
  • Hard money loans: 70%–90% (deal‑dependent)
  • BRRRR refinances: often capped at 75%

A “good” LTV depends on the investor’s strategy. Lower LTV reduces risk; higher LTV increases leverage and potential returns.

Why Loan to Value (LTV) Matters to Investors

LTV matters because it:

  • Determines required down payment
  • Influences interest rates and loan terms
  • Affects DSCR and loan approval
  • Impacts cash flow and leverage
  • Helps investors compare financing options
  • Signals risk to lenders

Understanding LTV helps investors structure deals that meet both lender requirements and investment goals.

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Shows how much leverage is being used
  • Helps compare loan programs
  • Influences interest rates and loan approval
  • Simple and fast to calculate

Cons

  • High LTV increases lender scrutiny
  • Higher leverage can reduce cash flow
  • Does not account for property condition or income
  • Can limit refinancing options

Common Mistakes / Pitfalls

Common mistakes include:

  • Using purchase price instead of appraised value when lenders use the appraisal
  • Forgetting that rehab loans may use ARV instead of current value
  • Assuming higher leverage always improves returns
  • Ignoring how LTV affects DSCR and loan approval
  • Not accounting for lender‑specific LTV caps

Accurate LTV calculations prevent financing surprises during underwriting.

Loan to Value (LTV) vs Other Metrics

LTV vs ARV LTV
Standard LTV uses current value; ARV LTV uses after‑repair value for rehab loans.

LTV vs DSCR
LTV measures leverage; DSCR measures income relative to debt. Both affect loan approval.

LTV vs Down Payment
Down payment is the cash required; LTV is the percentage financed. They move inversely.

Market Variations

LTV requirements vary based on:

  • Market conditions
  • Interest rates
  • Loan type
  • Property type
  • Borrower credit profile
  • Lender risk tolerance

In tighter lending environments, maximum LTVs decrease.

Frequently Asked Questions

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