Commercial financing for the
DFW Metroplex.
Direct access to 30+ SBA, agency, bank, life-company, CMBS, and debt-fund lenders. Loan sizing from $50K to $500M+. Closings from 7 days to 90.
- SBA 504 & 7(a) · 10% down
- Bridge debt · 2-week close
- Multifamily agency execution
- Industrial & construction
By the numbers
Direct relationships with banks, SBA Preferred Lenders, Fannie and Freddie, life insurance companies, CMBS conduits, and debt funds writing paper across the DFW Metroplex.
Not a lead-gen website. Not a referral mill. A working commercial mortgage broker with lenders who take our calls.
- Loan sizing
- $50K$500M+
- Small-balance SBA to institutional acquisitions
- DFW markets served
- 82
- Cities, counties, submarkets, and corridors across the Metroplex
- Loan programs
- 17
- Every major commercial real estate debt product
One of the deepest commercial real estate markets in America
The Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex is the fourth-largest metro in the United States and one of the most active commercial real estate markets in the country. Over the last decade DFW has absorbed more industrial square footage than almost any U.S. metro, built out multifamily at scale across every suburban growth front, and drawn institutional capital into submarkets like Alliance, Legacy West, Uptown, and Las Colinas that now trade at pricing comparable to coastal CBDs.
For borrowers, the depth of the DFW market means something very practical: on nearly any deal, there are more lenders actively competing for the file than in almost any other U.S. metro. Our job is to match your specific property, sponsor profile, and business plan to the capital source whose credit box, pricing, and execution actually fit. Then we negotiate the best terms from the short list that works.
Every major commercial loan product
From $50K SBA 7(a) deals to $500M institutional permanent debt, we arrange the full spectrum of DFW commercial real estate financing through a network of 30+ capital sources.
SBA 504
SBA 504 Loans
The only commercial loan product in the country that gives owner-occupiers a 20- or 25-year fixed rate on 40% of their purchase.
- Loan size
- $500K → $15M
- Close
- 60–90 days
Bridge
Bridge Loans
Short-term debt capital for acquisitions that need speed, value-add projects that cannot wait for a permanent loan, and refinances with a story.
- Loan size
- $500K → $150M
- Close
- 2–4 weeks
Multifamily
Multifamily Loans
Agency, bridge, and construction debt for multifamily properties across the DFW Metroplex.
- Loan size
- $1M → $500M
- Close
- 45–90 days
Construction
Construction Loans
Capital for building it, industrial, multifamily, retail, hospitality, and mixed-use construction across the Metroplex.
- Loan size
- $1M → $250M
- Close
- 45–90 days
Refinance
Commercial Mortgage Refinance
Cash-out refinance, maturity take-out, and rate reduction on existing commercial mortgages across the DFW Metroplex.
- Loan size
- $500K → $500M
- Close
- 45–90 days
Industrial
Industrial Loans
Capital for warehouse, distribution, flex, and manufacturing assets in one of the country's hottest industrial markets.
- Loan size
- $1M → $300M
- Close
- 60–90 days
All loan programs
Commercial financing across the Metroplex
82 cities, submarkets, and corridors covered. We know the lenders who lean into each submarket, from Alliance big-box industrial to Uptown trophy multifamily to Ellis County owner-occupied SBA.
Pop. 2.6 million · Seat: Dallas
Dallas County
Dallas County is the economic anchor of the DFW Metroplex and the ninth-most-populous county in the United States. It contains the city of Dallas itself along with Irving, Garland, Mesquite, Grand Prairie, Richardson, and a string of inner-ring suburbs that together account for roughly a third of all commercial real estate inventory in North Texas. When you hear "DFW commercial real estate," the default mental image is here. Office towers in the CBD and Uptown, the industrial belt along I-30 and I-20, the flex corridors of Stemmons and LBJ all sit inside Dallas County.
Pop. 2.1 million · Seat: Fort Worth
Tarrant County
Tarrant County is the western half of the DFW Metroplex and home to Fort Worth, the 12th-largest city in the United States and one of the fastest-growing metro centers in the country. Unlike Dallas County, whose commercial real estate story has been shaped by decades of institutional investment, Tarrant County still has meaningful pockets of growth where land is affordable, absorption is strong, and the capital stack is less crowded. The Alliance corridor in northern Fort Worth alone has delivered more industrial square footage in the past decade than most entire U.S. metros.
Pop. 1.2 million · Seat: McKinney
Collin County
Collin County has been the single fastest-growing county in North Texas for more than a decade. The corporate relocations into Legacy West in Plano, Toyota's North American headquarters, JPMorgan Chase's regional hub, Liberty Mutual, FedEx Office, turned what was once a suburban bedroom market into one of the most sought-after commercial real estate addresses in the country. Frisco's growth trajectory has been equally dramatic: Fields West, The Star, PGA Frisco, and a steady stream of Class A multifamily and office development have reshaped the submarket.
Pop. 1.0 million · Seat: Denton
Denton County
Denton County sits at the northwest corner of the DFW Metroplex and has quietly become one of the most underrated commercial real estate markets in North Texas. The University of North Texas and Texas Woman's University anchor the city of Denton with a steady student and academic population. Lewisville, Flower Mound, The Colony, and Carrollton form a mature suburban corridor along I-35E and the Dallas North Tollway that has seen decades of retail, multifamily, and light industrial development.
Pop. 215,000 · Seat: Waxahachie
Ellis County
Ellis County is the southern frontier of the DFW Metroplex, a growth story that looks much like Collin County did 15 years ago. Midlothian has become one of the most active industrial development markets in North Texas, with large-scale distribution, manufacturing, and data center projects pushing into available land south of the I-20 and US-287 corridors. Waxahachie, the county seat, has seen steady residential and commercial absorption as the DFW growth front expands southward.
Ready to start your deal?
Tell us about your property and we'll match you to the right capital source across our network of 30+ lenders.