Bridge Loans & Credit Enhancements in LIHTC/Bond Deals: What Lenders Really Need at Closing
Bridge capital and credit enhancement keep LIHTC/bond transactions moving—funding land, predevelopment, and gap needs before equity arrives and stabilizing the bond execution. Here’s a plain-English walkthrough of what lenders expect, the opinions they require, and the closing deliverables you’ll be asked to produce—and how developer financing legal counsel turns a moving target into a clean close.
Why bridge and enhancement exist in these deals
LIHTC equity arrives in tranches tied to milestones; soft funds reimburse late; construction draws don’t cover every cost up front. Bridge loans fill timing gaps against committed future sources. On the bond side, credit enhancement (direct bank purchase, letter of credit, or other forms) lowers borrowing costs and satisfies issuer or investor requirements. The trick is structuring these layers so they don’t jeopardize the 50% Test, LIHTC eligibility, or post-conversion performance.
What lenders look for before they say “yes”
Underwriting focuses on three anchors: sponsor strength, credible takeout, and document harmony. Sponsors are tested for liquidity and net worth covenants sized to completion risks and potential cost overruns. Takeouts must be real and calendar-certain—tax credit equity schedules, permanent loan commitments, and soft-fund award conditions have to line up in a single sources-and-uses. And every covenant that touches rents, incomes, reserves, and timelines needs to match across bond, TCAC, and soft-fund documents to avoid contradictions that make closing counsel nervous.
Core requirements you’ll have to satisfy
Expect completion guaranties, carry or interest reserves sized to the construction schedule, contingency budgets that survive value engineering, and evidence of shovel-readiness (permits, CEQA/NEPA clearances, utility will-serves). Third-party reports—appraisal, market study, environmental (Phase I/II), and plans/specs reviews—must be current and addressed to all capital providers. Title and survey need lender-standard endorsements, clean legal descriptions, and recorded access/utility rights. Insurance (builder’s risk, GL, professional, workers’ comp; OCIP/CCIP if used) must match lender forms. For credit enhancement, add issuer approvals, bond tax certificates, and trustee mechanics that trace proceeds and protect the 50% Test.
Opinions that typically appear in these closings
Lenders and enhancement providers will expect enforceability and authority opinions covering the borrower, its affiliates, and sometimes the managing member. UCC and real-property opinions confirm the perfection of security interests and mortgage liens. Tax counsel delivers opinions supporting tax-exempt status of the bonds and compliance with private-activity rules; in LIHTC transactions, you’ll also see opinions on partnership tax matters, eligible basis methodology, and the mechanics of capital contributions and adjusters. Where bonds are publicly offered, continuing disclosure and securities-law opinions enter the stack; for direct bank purchases, bank-form opinions often add “no conflicts” and “no governmental approvals beyond those listed” confirmations.
What shows up on the closing checklist
You’ll assemble corporate authorizations and incumbency certificates; the bond stack (indenture or funding loan agreement, loan agreement, regulatory agreement, tax certificate, purchase/underwriting agreement if applicable); credit documents (construction and perm loans, reimbursement or letter-of-credit agreements); equity documents (partnership or operating agreement, subscription, contribution schedule, adjusters, ROFR/Year-15 provisions); intercreditor and assignment agreements among the bank, trustee, perm lender, and soft lenders; title pro formas with endorsements; ALTA survey; escrow instructions; SNDA and subordination templates; construction contracts (GMP or similar), architect/engineer agreements, and assignment-of-contracts packages. A practical addition: a covenant crosswalk that proves the rent, income, UA method, unit mix, and reporting cadence are identical everywhere.
How credit enhancement dovetails with bonds
In a direct-purchase structure, the bank buys the bonds and holds them through construction and conversion; its credit agreement governs draws, covenants, and defaults. In LOC-backed or insured public offerings, the enhancement wraps the bonds for the market; you’ll layer in reimbursement mechanics and continuing disclosure. In both cases, bond proceeds must be traceable to eligible costs, and requisitions run through the trustee under procedures your team will follow for the entire build.
Where deals slip—and how counsel prevents it
Closings wobble when the “one set of numbers” rule breaks. A rent limit or UA method that differs by even a line item can trigger re-drafts across half the binder. Another common snag is sequencing: if soft funds hit first and bond draws lag, the 50% Test can be jeopardized. Developer financing legal counsel front-loads these issues—locking a shared exhibit set, negotiating conflict-resolution clauses, modeling bond-financed basis and draw order, and aligning guaranty and reserve language across bank, issuer, and investor forms. When last-minute title or entity wrinkles appear, counsel cures with targeted endorsements, confirmatory deeds, or escrow holdbacks that don’t disturb tax or regulatory positions.
A realistic timeline
From initial term sheets to funding, plan on roughly six to eight months for a direct-purchase bond execution, longer for public offerings or complex site conditions. Work backward from allocation expirations and contractor mobilization: finalize GMP and third-party reports early, schedule issuer hearings and approvals with slack, and circulate near-final forms two to three weeks before closing so opinions can be drafted off stable documents.
The payoff of disciplined closing management
With aligned documents, complete deliverables, and pre-cleared opinions, construction starts cleanly, draw cycles run without exception requests, and conversion happens on schedule—protecting developer fee timing, equity adjusters, and long-term affordability obligations.
Need an experienced hand to standardize lender requirements, negotiate opinion scopes, and deliver a clean binder at funding? Contact us to work with developer financing legal counsel that keeps your bridge loans and credit enhancements on schedule—and your LIHTC/bond deal fully compliant.





