In This Article
This article is presented by Express Capital Financing.
If you spend enough time around real estate investors, you start to notice there are two types of people entering 2026.
The first group is still whispering to itself that rates are “definitely” going back to 3%. They’re convinced the economic stars will align, Jerome Powell will have a spiritual breakthrough, and mortgages will magically become cheaper again. These are the same people who think Blockbuster might return if we all “manifest” hard enough.
The second group? They’re building wealth regardless of what interest rates are doing. They’re refinancing, pulling equity, and rolling cash from deal to deal, using momentum as their strategy rather than waiting for the perfect economic weather report.
This guide is for them.
And before we jump in, thank you to Express Capital Financing for helping shape this updated 2026 BRRRR playbook. Their team has seen every version of the refinance universe—and still picks up the phone when investors call (which says a lot these days).
The 2026 Reality: Refinancing Still Works
Let’s kick off with a real story. Back in 2020, an investor named Sarah bought a duplex in Ohio. She did what many rookies do: She over-renovated the kitchen, underestimated her contractor’s ability to disappear without warning, and spent six months in a stress dream.
But she did one thing absolutely right: She refinanced. When the dust settled, she pulled out $52,000 and immediately bought a fourplex.
Fast-forward to today, and she’s sitting on 22 units. And this is not because the market was easy, but because she didn’t wait for perfect conditions.
That’s the whole lesson for 2026: You don’t need to be perfect. You need to make progress.
Here are the steps to take.
Step 1: Stabilize Like You Mean It
Every lender wants proof that your property is functioning like a stable adult, not a chaotic group chat. That means no lingering repairs, mysterious leaks, or tenants who pay rent based on vibes and lunar cycles.
A BiggerPockets member recently shared that their lender required them to show a full month of on-time rent payments before the file was touched. They tightened operations, stabilized the property in 45 days, and the refinance sailed through.
A smart tactic is keeping a stabilization folder with:
- Before-and-after photos
- Repair receipts
- Contractor invoices
- A list of upgrades
Hand this to your lender, and they’ll trust you immediately.
Step 2: Raise Rent (Thoughtfully) and Lock In Leases
Value comes from income. That part is simple. What’s more complicated is navigating a 2026 rental market where half the country feels soft, half feels hot, and the rest feels like a confused middle schooler trying to pick a personality.
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This is not the year to wing it. Make small improvements, run clean turnovers, and lock tenants into 12-month leases. Predictability equals a higher value on paper.
Step 3: Build Your Digital Paperwork HQ
Refinances often die because of messy paperwork, not bad deals. Lenders now expect everything to be clean, digital, and accessible. That means:
- E-leases
- A rent roll
- Income and expense statements
- Insurance documents
- Utility bills
- Property tax history
- Rehab receipts
- Bank statements
- Before/after photos
Put everything in one shared folder titled “Refi 2026—[Your Property Address].” Send it early. It makes the entire process faster.
A fun pro move is to record a two-minute walkthrough on your phone explaining every upgrade. Appraisers appreciate the context more than you’d think.
Step 4: Call Your Lender Before You Need Them
If you’re waiting until the very end of your renovation to call your lender, you’re already behind.
One investor working with Express Capital Financing called during demolition. The lender walked him through expected LTV, required documents, appraisal timing, and how soon he could close after stabilization. That single early phone call saved six weeks and unlocked an additional $18,000 in cash-out.
Step 5: Date Around (Lenders, Not People)
Relying on one lender is the refinance equivalent of only eating at one restaurant, and then complaining that the food “lacks variety.”
You want at least three lenders in your corner. Each will give you different LTVs, fees, underwriting styles, and flexibility.
One Phoenix investor recently got two quotes: 6.5% and 7.3%. The 7.3% lender offered an 80% LTV and a 30-year fixed. The 6.5% lender capped his LTV at 70%. He took the higher rate because it got him the capital he needed to buy another property. Cash matters more in these situations.
Step 6: Negotiate the Whole Package
Most beginners only negotiate the rate. Veteran investors negotiate the entire loan. Ask your lender about:
- Fees
- Amortization
- DSCR minimums
- Interest-only options
- Reserve requirements
- Fixed-rate periods
Many lenders have quietly increased “admin” fees this year. Ask for a full breakdown so nothing surprises you at closing.
Step Seven: Tell a Value Story to the Appraiser
In 2026, conservative appraisals are more common, which means you need to help appraisers understand what your property was, what you transformed it into, and why it deserves your target valuation. Create a packet with:
- Before-and-after photos
- Full upgrade list
- Nearby rental comps
- Rent roll
- Neighborhood developments
A BiggerPockets investor once submitted a nine-page binder. The appraiser increased the value because the packet demonstrated the actual improvement. That binder was worth $14,000, and only cost the time it took to put it together.
Step 8: Pull the Right Comps
Some comps are garbage, while others are gold. In 2026, the difference matters more than ever.
One investor in Charlotte had an appraisal come in way too low. They challenged it using comps from the correct micro-neighborhood—literally the next block over. The difference in valuation? $62,000.
Your comp homework can make or break your refinance.
Step 9: Treat Your Refi Like a Project
Refinances stall for three predictable reasons: slow paperwork, appraisals, and underwriting. Avoid that mess by creating a timeline of important dates, set milestones for completion, and follow up proactively.
Express Capital Financing is designed for this pace. Their team does fast underwriting, specifically for BRRRR investors.
Step 10: When the Appraisal Comes in Sad
If your appraisal comes in low enough to ruin your afternoon, breathe. You still have options. You can:
- Challenge the report.
- Send better comps.
- Highlight missed upgrades.
- Request a second appraiser.
- Wait for rents to trend up.
- Switch lenders entirely.
A Colorado investor challenged a $47,000 low appraisal and recovered $39,000 after showing the appraiser what they had missed. That’s the power of pushing back with facts and evidence.
Step 11: Leverage Your Track Record
After your second or third BRRRR, lenders stop seeing you as a risk and start seeing you as a pipeline. Show them:
- Rent growth
- Payment history
- Low vacancy
- Successful past refinances
Lenders love predictability. Use that to negotiate better terms for yourself.
The Fast Track System
Express Capital Financing specializes in investor-focused refinances. This means fast underwriting, high-LTV cash-out options, bridge-to-rent structures, and complete transparency on fees and terms.
One investor in Michigan needed a refinance to close fast so he could lock up another property. Express Capital Financing closed in 21 days, freeing up enough cash to buy his fifth property without raising private money.
Final Thoughts
Every BRRRR investor eventually reaches the part of the journey where the work turns into leverage. You found the deal, took on the renovation, and got the property performing. Now you’re standing at the moment that separates stalled portfolios from growing ones: the refinance. It’s the inflection point where sweat equity becomes opportunity, and where momentum finally kicks in.
Treat this step like the engine that powers everything that comes next. Use the insights in this blog (and this downloadable guide) to keep the energy moving forward.
And when you want a lending partner designed for speed and investor needs, start the conversation with Express Capital Financing. The leap to your next property is closer than it looks.
