Development Finance

What Is Mezzanine Finance In Development?

Quick answer

Mezzanine finance usually fills the

10% to 20%

Funding gap above senior debt in many development structures

  • Capital stack position Between senior debt and equity
  • Typical security Second ranking mortgage
  • Main purpose Bridge the equity gap
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Mezzanine finance is a layer of funding used in property development that sits between the senior lender's debt and the developer's own equity. It is usually brought in when the bank or primary lender will not fund the full capital required to complete the project.

In practical terms, it helps a developer move forward with a viable site or construction project without contributing all of the missing capital themselves.

Because mezzanine finance ranks behind senior debt, it carries more risk and usually costs more than senior funding. In exchange, it can increase total leverage and reduce the amount of cash equity the developer needs to contribute upfront.

When is mezzanine finance used?

Mezzanine finance is most commonly used in development projects where the deal is fundamentally sound, but there is a shortfall between the senior lender's approved facility and the total capital required to settle, build and complete the project.

It is often seen in projects where the developer wants to preserve cash, improve return on equity, or move ahead without bringing in a full joint venture partner.

Typical situations include:

  • iconTownhouse or apartment projects with a funding gap after senior debt approval
  • iconDevelopments where the sponsor wants to reduce the amount of cash equity tied up
  • iconProjects requiring a top up above conservative senior lender leverage
  • iconDevelopments where bringing in equity partners would dilute ownership too heavily
  • iconSites with strong feasibility but a temporary capital shortfall
  • iconDevelopers wanting to spread their capital across multiple projects

How Mezzanine Finance Works

A development capital stack usually starts with senior debt, then mezzanine finance, then developer equity.

The senior lender normally holds first ranking security and is repaid first. The mezzanine lender sits behind that position, often under a priority deed, and is repaid before the developer's equity is returned.

A simple structure may look like this:

  • 01 Senior debt
  • 02 Mezzanine layer
  • 03 Developer equity
  • 04 Construction progress
  • 05 Sale or refinance
  • 06 Debt repayment waterfall

The repayment waterfall matters. Senior debt is paid first, mezzanine comes next, and only after both are cleared does the residual profit flow back to the developer or equity investors.

How the Structure Is Assessed

Mezzanine finance is generally assessed in relation to the full capital stack, not just the senior loan on its own.

Method 01

Senior debt base

The primary lender funds the lower risk layer, often to a conservative LVR, LTDC or GRV position depending on the project and lender appetite.

Method 02

Mezzanine top up

The mezzanine lender then provides an additional subordinated layer, commonly filling roughly 10 percent to 20 percent of the stack where suitable security and profit margin exist.

Illustrative structure 70% + 10% to 20%
  • Senior debt may fund the first major portion of total cost or value
  • Mezzanine sits above that as a higher risk, higher return layer
  • Developer still contributes equity beneath both debt layers

In many development deals, mezzanine finance does not replace equity entirely. It simply reduces the size of the equity gap so the project can proceed on workable terms.

What Mezzanine Lenders Look For

Before approving mezzanine funding, lenders still want a strong development feasibility, not just a missing funding number.

Because the mezzanine position is subordinated, the lender will focus heavily on project quality, exit strategy and profit buffer.

A typical review includes:

  • iconLand value and senior debt terms
  • iconConstruction costs and contingency
  • iconDeveloper experience and delivery capability
  • iconGross realisation value and evidence of end values
  • iconPre sales for larger projects
  • iconExit strategy through sale, refinance or settlement
  • iconPriority deed and intercreditor arrangements
  • iconSufficient profit margin after all debt costs
15 - 20 %+
Many development capital providers still want to see a solid profit margin buffer. If the feasibility is too tight, mezzanine funding can make the deal too thin rather than stronger.

How Mezzanine Finance Is Usually Structured

Although every deal is negotiated differently, mezzanine facilities in development often share some common features.

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Second ranking security

Many mezzanine loans are secured by a second ranking mortgage or similar subordinated security, sitting behind the senior lender's first mortgage.

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Higher return

Because the mezzanine lender takes more risk than the senior lender, returns are usually higher and may include interest, line fees, exit fees or a profit participation component.

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End of project repayment

Repayment is commonly linked to the sale or refinance of the project, which can help short term cash flow during construction if structured appropriately.

Common problems

Mezzanine finance can solve the right problem, but it can also create pressure if the development is undercapitalised or the exit is weak.

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Using mezzanine to rescue a poor deal

If the feasibility is already too tight, adding higher cost debt can push the project into an unsafe position.

Better solutions may include:
  • icon Reworking density, design or build cost
  • icon Renegotiating site price or timing
  • icon Bringing in a stronger equity partner instead
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No clear exit strategy

Both senior and mezzanine lenders need confidence about how they will be repaid at the end of the project.

That may require:
  • icon Strong pre sales or end buyer evidence
  • icon A credible refinance strategy
  • icon Realistic timelines and sales assumptions
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Intercreditor complexity

Mezzanine funding can require detailed legal agreements between the senior lender and the mezzanine provider, which adds complexity and time.

Common documents include priority deeds, security documents and tailored repayment waterfalls.
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Underestimating cost of capital

Developers sometimes focus on getting the deal funded, but not on what the added mezzanine layer does to total finance costs and final profit.

A proper feasibility should model interest, fees, timing risk and downside scenarios before mezzanine is used.

Steps To Arrange Mezzanine Finance

Step

01

Secure or identify the senior debt position and understand the funding shortfall

Step

02

Prepare the feasibility, project costs, end values and exit strategy

Step

03

Model the full capital stack including senior debt, mezzanine debt and equity

Step

04

Approach lenders that understand subordinated development structures

Step

05

Negotiate security, pricing, repayment waterfall and intercreditor terms

Step

06

Settle the full capital stack and monitor the project carefully through to sale or refinance

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Speak with a Development Finance Specialist

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Mezzanine finance is more specialised than standard development debt and the right structure depends on the senior lender, the project risk, the profit margin and the proposed exit.

A specialist can help compare whether mezzanine debt, preferred equity, a joint venture or a different senior lending structure is the better fit.

Speak with a finance specialist about your development project.

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