New Hampshire fix and flip FAQ
Ten questions, asked by New Hampshire flippers.
Specific to New Hampshire. For broader hard money questions — FICO floors, BRRRR strategy, the 70% rule, application flow — see the 70% rule explainer, the BRRRR mechanics breakdown, or the full FAQ.
Do you lend in New Hampshire?
Yes. PML funds fix and flip loans in all 50 states, with active flipper books in Manchester, Nashua, Concord, and Portsmouth. Single-family, duplex, triplex, and fourplex properties. Loan size from $100,000 to $5,000,000 per asset, with cross-collateralized facility lines available for sponsors running three or more concurrent New Hampshire projects. No state-line carve-outs on pricing or leverage; a Hillsborough County flip prices off the same rate sheet as a Hillsborough County flip.
Is PML licensed in New Hampshire?
New Hampshire does not require a separate state lender license for business-purpose loans on 1 to 4 unit non-owner-occupied investment property held by an entity. PML originates New Hampshire fix and flip loans under that posture, with closings handled through the customary New Hampshire closing process. Loans are not consumer mortgages; they cannot be used for a primary or secondary residence. The borrower is always an LLC, LP, or corporation, never a natural person.
What is the typical New Hampshire loan size and ARV range?
The bulk of New Hampshire fix and flip activity in our book lands in a $285,000 to $595,000 ARV band, with loans typically between $228,000 and $482,000 on a single asset. Manchester and Nashua skew toward the lower half of that band on entry-level cosmetic flips; Portsmouth and inner-belt Concord stretch to $895,000 plus on full-gut projects. We will write a New Hampshire loan as small as $100,000 and as large as $5,000,000.
How does title and escrow work in New Hampshire?
New Hampshire is an attorney-closing state. A licensed New Hampshire real estate attorney handles the closing in coordination with a title insurance underwriter; no escrow agent in the western-state sense. PML works with closing-attorney panels in every major New Hampshire metro and routes the deed of trust and closing protection letter accordingly. A clean New Hampshire file regularly closes 6 to 9 business days from term-sheet acceptance.
What transfer tax or recording fees apply in New Hampshire?
New Hampshire imposes a state real estate transfer tax at 1.5% of consideration ($7.50 per $1,000), split equally between buyer and seller by default. PML’s quote on the HUD reflects the actual New Hampshire tax and recording schedule for the subject county; there are no lender markups on third-party closing costs.
Does New Hampshire weather or seasonality affect rehab draws?
Northern New Hampshire winters slow exterior trade work (roofing, siding, concrete) from late November through March, but they do not slow our draw cadence. Inspector clears within one business day, wire goes out within 48 hours, year-round. Plan rehab budgets with a 2 to 4 week seasonal cushion on cold-weather exterior scopes.
How long does foreclosure take in New Hampshire if the loan defaults?
New Hampshire is a non-judicial foreclosure state operating under power of sale. A defaulted business-purpose loan can move from notice to trustee sale in roughly 60 days. As a sponsor this should never matter; as an underwriting input it is one reason our New Hampshire loans price cleanly off the national rate sheet.
How quickly does Hillsborough County record a New Hampshire deed?
The Hillsborough County e-recording system normally posts a deed and deed of trust the same business day they are submitted. Other major New Hampshire metros (Nashua, Concord and Portsmouth) run similarly fast on e-recording. PML wires loan proceeds the day of close; the lien recording happens in parallel.
Do you fund foreclosure or auction purchases in New Hampshire?
Yes. New Hampshire trustee sales typically happen on a posted weekly or monthly schedule at the county courthouse. PML issues a binding term sheet within four business hours of a property submission, which is sufficient for most New Hampshire non-judicial auctions and most online foreclosure platforms. Clean title and a binding term sheet can move from winning bid to wire in 7 to 10 calendar days.
Can I close into a New Hampshire LLC formed after the property goes under contract?
Yes. PML can close into a newly-formed New Hampshire LLC even if you took the property under contract in your personal name. The closing party handles the deed transfer at closing — the property moves from your personal name into the new entity simultaneous with the loan funding, with the standard New Hampshire transfer-tax treatment applied at close. We do not lend to natural persons; the borrower is always an entity. We can help structure the entity if you do not yet have one in place.