When senior debt stops short of the capital needed to close, build, or recapitalize a project, the missing layer often sits between the mortgage and common equity. That layer is usually mezzanine financing or preferred equity.
For commercial real estate investors, developers, and broker partners, the right subordinate capital structure can keep ownership more intact, support stronger returns, and move a deal forward without waiting on a full equity raise. Trans-Bay Capital supports these transactions with AI-powered underwriting, broad lender coverage, and full capital stack execution across 44 states.
Mezzanine financing and preferred equity for commercial real estate capital stacks
Mezzanine financing is junior to senior debt and senior to common equity. In real estate, it is often used when the first mortgage reaches its advance limit but the sponsor wants to avoid bringing in more common equity than necessary. It is usually priced higher than senior debt because it carries more risk and sits lower in the repayment order.
Preferred equity fills a similar gap, but it is structured as equity rather than a loan. That distinction matters. Mezzanine debt has a stated maturity, interest payments, and creditor-style remedies. Preferred equity usually earns a preferred return and may include approval rights, cash flow controls, or sale rights depending on the documents.
Both can be powerful tools when sized correctly.
The best fit depends on the senior lender, the business plan, projected cash flow, the exit timeline, and how much control the sponsor is willing to share.
| Feature | Mezzanine Financing | Preferred Equity |
|---|---|---|
| Legal form | Loan | Equity investment |
| Position in stack | Behind senior debt, ahead of equity | Behind all debt, ahead of common equity |
| Return profile | Interest, often with accrual features or upside participation | Preferred return, sometimes with profit participation |
| Maturity | Usually fixed | Often tied to redemption, sale, or refinance |
| Remedies | Creditor remedies tied to pledged equity interests | Contractual governance and economic remedies |
| Tax treatment | Interest may be deductible, subject to tax rules | Returns are generally not treated as interest expense |
| Typical use | Filling a loan proceeds gap with debt-like structure | Filling a gap when mezzanine is restricted or equity-style capital is preferred |
When mezzanine financing makes sense in a CRE transaction
A senior lender may offer strong terms and still leave a meaningful gap. That is common in acquisitions, construction, repositioning, and refinancings where today’s valuation or debt service constraints reduce proceeds. Mezzanine financing can bridge that gap while preserving more of the sponsor’s common equity position.
It can also work well when a project has a clear path to stabilization or refinance. Interest-only structures, accrued interest features, and bullet maturities can give a borrower room to execute the business plan before the subordinate piece is repaid.
Many requests fall into a few practical categories:
- Acquisition financing gaps
- Construction capital stacks
- Refinance shortfalls
- Lease-up and repositioning plans
- Sponsor recapitalizations
How mezzanine debt differs from preferred equity in practice
Sponsors often compare price first. That is understandable, but structure usually matters just as much. A slightly lower coupon does not always mean a better execution outcome if the senior lender rejects the intercreditor terms or if the governance package becomes too restrictive.
Mezzanine debt is often attractive when the borrower wants a debt instrument with a defined maturity and limited operational interference before default. Preferred equity can be more flexible with a senior lender that does not want a true mezz lender in the stack, or when the project has enough upside to justify an equity-style return profile.
The differences usually show up in four areas:
- Payment structure: Mezzanine debt pays interest on a set schedule, while preferred equity pays a preferred return before common equity distributions
- Control rights: Mezzanine lenders often rely on covenants and pledged equity remedies, while preferred equity investors may negotiate approval rights over major decisions
- Exit mechanics: Mezzanine is usually repaid at refinance, sale, or maturity, while preferred equity may be redeemed through a negotiated buyout or capital event
- Senior lender treatment: Some senior lenders are comfortable with mezzanine debt, while others prefer preferred equity because it avoids a separate lien structure
That is why subordinate capital should never be treated as an afterthought. It needs to fit the first mortgage, the partnership structure, and the project timeline from day one.
Key underwriting factors for mezzanine financing and preferred equity
Subordinate capital providers focus heavily on downside protection. The question is not only whether the project can succeed, but whether the capital stack remains durable if lease-up slows, costs move higher, or rates stay elevated longer than expected.
In commercial real estate, the core variables usually include in-place and projected cash flow, basis, sponsor experience, market depth, business plan credibility, and the refinance or sale path. Strong assets with clear execution plans tend to open more options and better pricing. Transitional deals can still be financeable, though structure becomes more important and lender selection matters more.
Trans-Bay Capital uses AI-powered underwriting and lender matching to sort through these variables quickly and position the request with the right part of the market. That matters because subordinate capital is not a one-size-fits-all product. Debt funds, private credit groups, family offices, and structured equity investors all view risk differently.
Well-run transactions usually pay close attention to a few items:
- Debt service capacity: Can the asset support current pay obligations during the hold period?
- Capital stack size: Is the subordinate layer appropriate for the asset, sponsor, and exit plan?
- Intercreditor terms: Do the senior and junior parties have a workable framework for cures, standstills, and remedies?
- Timing: Can the subordinate piece be quoted and closed fast enough to match the senior lender’s schedule?
- Sponsor liquidity: Is there enough support for carry costs, cost overruns, and required reserves?
Faster execution for subordinate capital placement
Speed matters most when the senior lender is ready and the subordinate piece is the only item left.
Trans-Bay Capital combines capital markets advisory with direct lending capabilities, which creates flexibility across the full stack. For borrowers, that means one process can cover senior permanent loans, bridge financing, construction loans, mezzanine financing, and preferred equity instead of splitting the assignment across multiple counterparties.
Access to more than 7,000 lenders and capital sources gives borrowers a much wider field than a narrow broker list or a single balance sheet approach. Many transactions can receive term sheet feedback within 24 to 48 hours, and some close in 2 to 3 weeks when diligence, legal work, and third-party reports support that timeline.
That speed is valuable, but certainty matters just as much. A well-run process should identify lender appetite early, surface structural issues before documents are drafted, and keep the senior and subordinate pieces moving together.
Full capital stack support for investors, developers, and broker partners
Subordinate capital works best when it is part of a coordinated strategy, not a last-minute patch. A construction loan may need preferred equity to reach the required capitalization. A bridge lender may allow mezzanine debt to support a value-add plan. A refinance may need a small junior tranche to avoid a forced equity infusion at the wrong point in the cycle.
Trans-Bay Capital supports middle-market to institutional transactions nationwide with a service model built around speed, lender fit, and execution discipline. That includes sponsor-side advisory for borrowers, placement support for broker partners, and capital stack planning that connects senior debt, bridge, construction, mezzanine, and preferred equity in one process.
For sponsors evaluating a new acquisition, a recapitalization, or a refinance gap, the right subordinate structure can turn a constrained deal into a financeable one. The key is choosing the right instrument, sizing it correctly, and getting it in front of the capital sources most likely to close.
ABOUT TRANS-BAY CAPITAL
Who We Are
Trans-Bay Capital is a commercial real estate capital advisory firm and direct lender headquartered in San Francisco. We advise sponsors and operators on debt originations across the full capital stack — from bridge and construction to permanent financing and structured equity.
Our AI-powered platform surfaces optimal financing from a network of 7,000+ institutional lenders, delivering term sheets in 48 to 72 hours with a 95% close rate. We serve sponsors across 44 states with loan sizes from $5M to $100M+. Institutional precision. Boutique partnership. Certainty of execution.
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