Loan-to-Value (LTV)

Loan-to-value is the ratio of loan balance to property appraised value, expressed as a percentage — a measure of leverage and lender risk.

What it means

LTV = Loan Amount ÷ Appraised Value. A $2M loan on a $3M property is 66.7% LTV.

Lenders set maximum LTV by asset class and risk: 75–80% for multifamily agency debt, 65–75% for stabilized commercial, 55–65% for bridge loans against transitional properties. LTV constrains leverage on well-valued properties but fails as a brake when appraisal assumptions are inflated; debt yield is a more conservative parallel test.

LTV drops as principal amortizes or value rises. Refinances reset LTV based on a current appraisal.

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