A cleaner loan file is easier to review.
If you are considering a property-backed loan in Costa Rica, one of the biggest factors is how well your file is organized from the beginning.
What lenders usually want to see first
Private lending is practical, but it is still document-driven. The stronger and cleaner the file, the easier it is to review.
In most cases, lenders want to quickly understand five things:
- What property is being offered as collateral
- How much money is being requested
- What the funds will be used for
- How strong the documentation is
- What the exit strategy looks like
A borrower does not need to arrive with a perfect package on day one. But the file does need to make sense. Realistic expectations, lower leverage, and cleaner documents usually help a file move much more efficiently.
Basic information we usually need at the start
For an initial review, the most helpful starting point is a simple, organized summary of the deal.
Borrower And Property Basics
- Borrower name and contact information
- Property location
- Google Maps, Waze, or pin-drop location
- Property type
- Estimated property value
Loan And Structure Basics
- Requested loan amount
- Clear use of funds
- Any existing loan or lien on the property
- Short explanation of how the loan is expected to be repaid
This basic overview helps determine early whether the file appears worth pursuing before more time is spent gathering additional documentation.
Property documents that are commonly important
The exact checklist can vary by file, but the following items are often important in a property-backed loan review:
- Folio Real or current registry information
- Plano Catastro, also known as the registered property survey map
- Property photos
- Municipal tax status
- Basic ownership details
- Any available appraisal or valuation support
- Information about access, water, zoning, and improvements where relevant
For some files, especially land, development, or commercial property, the supporting documentation becomes more important because the lender needs a clearer picture of usability and marketability.
What makes a file easier to approve
Some requests are much easier to review than others. In general, the strongest files usually include:
Good Location
Location matters because lenders want collateral that is understandable, marketable, and realistic to evaluate.
Realistic Loan Amount
The loan request needs to make sense compared with the property value and the overall situation.
Lower Loan-To-Value
Lower leverage usually makes the file more attractive to the lenders we work with.
Clear Use Of Funds
Stronger requests usually explain exactly where the money is going and why it makes sense.
Clean Documentation
Clean title, registry information, photos, and ownership details help reduce friction.
Sensible Exit Strategy
Lenders want to understand how the loan is expected to be repaid or refinanced.
While some loans may go up to 50 percent loan-to-value, stronger files are often closer to 30 percent loan-to-value. For example, if a property is worth 500,000 US dollars and the loan request is 250,000 US dollars, that is 50 percent loan-to-value.
What kinds of use of funds usually make more sense
The best-fit files are usually the ones where the money is going back into the property or supporting a sensible property-related objective.
- Completing unfinished construction
- Improving a rental property
- Adding useful improvements such as a pool or solar system
- Renovating or upgrading a commercial property
- Supporting an income-producing use tied to the property
We do not position this type of lending around debt consolidation. The strongest files are usually practical, asset-based, and tied directly to the real estate.
Do borrowers need proof of income or bank-style documents?
These loans are primarily reviewed based on the property and the overall strength of the file rather than traditional local bank underwriting.
What matters most is the collateral, the requested amount, the documentation, and whether the deal makes practical sense.
Practical Review
Larger, more complex, or more commercial files may still require more supporting information so the overall structure is clear.
The review is not only about the property value. It is also about whether the request, documentation, use of funds, and repayment plan make sense together.
Requirements for home equity, commercial, and construction loans
Standard property-backed loans generally fall into three main categories. The core review approach is similar, but each type can involve different supporting details.
Home Equity Loans
These are often the simplest files when the property is clear, the requested amount is realistic, and the use of funds makes sense.
Commercial Loans
Commercial property loans may require clearer information about the asset, its use, and how the loan supports the property or business purpose tied to it.
Construction Loans
Construction files usually need more detail because lenders want to understand the stage of the project, the permits in place, the expected budget, and how funds may be released over time.
Additional items often needed for construction files
Construction loans usually require more than a basic property summary. Depending on the file, useful supporting items may include:
- Construction budget
- Plans or blueprints
- Building permits
- Project timeline
- Contractor information if applicable
- Current stage of construction
- Photos showing present condition and progress
Draws And Organization Matter
Because construction funds may be released in stages, organization is especially important in these files.
The clearer the budget, timeline, permits, and current stage, the easier it is to understand how the loan may need to be structured.
Additional items often needed for larger project financing
Larger deals and shovel-ready projects are reviewed separately from standard property-backed loans. These files usually require a more organized package from the beginning.
For larger deals, especially around US$1 million and above, we generally require everything to be shared in one clearly labeled Google Drive folder for efficient review.
Typical Folder Structure
- 01 – Overview: Plano Catastro, Google Maps pin, short description
- 02 – Legal & Registry: Folio Real, municipal taxes status
- 03 – Zoning & Water: proper zoning and water approval documentation
- 04 – Construction: permits, plans, blueprints, environmental approvals if applicable
- 05 – Financials: bank appraisal and comparable sales if available
- 06 – Photos: 10 to 15 key photos only
Additional Review May Follow
Additional documentation may be requested once lender interest exists.
The first goal is to make the file understandable, organized, and easy to review without overwhelming the process with scattered documents.
What slows a file down
Even when a property looks strong, files often slow down because basic issues were not addressed early.
Missing Documents
Incomplete property, ownership, registry, or construction documents can delay review.
Unpaid Taxes
Municipal tax issues or unclear property status can create problems before closing.
Title Issues
Registry, lien, annotation, or ownership questions need to be reviewed early.
Unclear Ownership
Personal ownership, corporate ownership, shareholders, and authority to borrow need to be clear.
Weak Construction Details
Missing permits, incomplete plans, or unclear progress can slow construction files.
Slow Organization
Borrowers who are slow to organize the file can delay even a strong opportunity.
If the file is clean and the borrower is organized, closings can sometimes happen in about 10 days. Delays usually come from issues around documentation, property status, or organization.
What if there is already a loan on the property?
If there is an existing first-position loan or lien on the property, it usually needs to be paid off from the new loan proceeds at the closing so the new lender can move into the required position.
This is one reason the current debt picture needs to be disclosed early. It helps avoid wasted time later in the review process.
An existing loan does not automatically mean the file cannot work. It simply needs to be reviewed and handled correctly as part of the closing structure.
This is for serious borrowers and referral partners.
This page is most useful for borrowers who are serious about presenting a clean, realistic, well-supported request.
It is also helpful for brokers, agents, and referral partners who want to understand what information is worth gathering before sending a file over.
The goal is simple: better files, faster review, and fewer surprises.
Start with the basic details.
If you want us to review a property-backed loan request in Costa Rica, the best next step is to send the basic details and supporting information in an organized way.
