Fixed-Rate vs. Floating Debt: What Real Estate Investors Need to Know Right now

Debt is one of the most powerful tools in real estate investing. It can magnify returns, improve cash flow, and accelerate wealth creation. But it can also increase risk—especially when the wrong debt structure is paired with the wrong market conditions.

For passive investors evaluating real estate syndications or private deals, understanding how debt works is crucial. And with interest rates fluctuating, the decision between fixed-rate and floating-rate debt has never been more important.

In this guide, we’ll break down what each type of debt means, how they impact investment outcomes, and what investors should look for in today’s environment.

What is Fixed-Rate Debt?

Fixed-rate debt means the interest rate is locked in for the life of the loan—or for a defined period. This structure provides payment stability and allows for more predictable cash flow.

Benefits:

  • Consistent monthly payments.
  • Hedge against interest rate hikes.
  • Easier underwriting and cash flow planning.

Drawbacks:

  • May come with slightly higher starting rates.
  • Prepayment penalties can limit flexibility.

What is Floating-Rate (or Variable-Rate) Debt?

Floating-rate debt has an interest rate that adjusts based on a benchmark (like SOFR or LIBOR) plus a spread. Payments can go up or down depending on market movements.

Benefits:

  • Lower initial interest rate in low-rate environments.
  • Often comes with shorter terms, which can suit quick turnaround projects.

Drawbacks:

  • Exposure to rising interest rates.
  • Payment unpredictability.
  • Often requires interest rate caps or hedging strategies.

How Debt Type Affects Real Estate Investments

For passive investors, the debt profile of a deal influences everything from projected returns to risk of capital loss.

Fixed-Rate Debt in Syndications:

  • Predictable returns.
  • Lower risk of cash flow disruption.
  • Common in long-term holds or core-plus deals.

Floating-Rate Debt in Syndications:

  • Higher potential IRR (on paper).
  • More common in value-add or opportunistic deals.
  • Greater reliance on timing and execution.

As rates rise, floating-rate debt can eat into projected cash flow or even turn negative. We’ve seen syndications in the past 24 months where rising interest payments wiped out investor distributions entirely.

Why This Matters Now

The past few years have been a rollercoaster for interest rates. After a long period of historically low borrowing costs, the Federal Reserve raised rates aggressively to combat inflation.

This shift exposed many operators who used floating-rate bridge loans without sufficient hedging. As payments skyrocketed, some deals fell into distress. And while rates may normalize, this period highlighted a critical truth: conservative debt structures matter.

What to Look for as an LP (Limited Partner)

When reviewing a deal, ask the sponsor these debt-related questions:

  1. Is the debt fixed or floating?
  2. If floating, is there an interest rate cap? Who is paying for it?
  3. What is the loan term and amortization schedule?
  4. Are there balloon payments or refinance risk?
  5. How sensitive is the deal to changes in debt service?

Good sponsors will stress-test their models. At Tamarack, we model various interest rate and cap rate scenarios to see how they affect cash flow and returns.

Case Study: Fixed vs. Floating in Action

Consider two deals, both acquired in 2021:

  • Deal A: 5-year fixed-rate loan at 4.25%. Conservative leverage, 10-year hold.
  • Deal B: 3-year floating-rate bridge loan at 3.5% starting rate. No rate cap.

By 2023, interest rates had risen dramatically. Deal A saw no change in debt service. Deal B’s rate jumped to over 7%, wiping out cash flow and forcing a capital call.

While Deal B once looked better on paper, Deal A offered resilience, investor confidence, and long-term optionality.

Other Debt Factors That Matter

Loan-to-Value (LTV): A lower LTV (e.g., 60–65%) provides more cushion and reduces risk.

Recourse vs. Non-Recourse: Non-recourse loans protect investors and operators from personal liability, but lenders may require stronger financials.

Prepayment Flexibility: Can the sponsor refinance or sell early without a penalty? If interest rates drop, flexible prepayment terms are a huge asset.

Interest-Only Periods: These improve short-term cash flow but delay principal paydown. Understand when amortization begins.

When Floating Debt Might Still Make Sense

While Tamarack generally favors fixed-rate debt for long-term holds, there are scenarios where floating-rate loans can be appropriate:

  • Short-term value-add or repositioning deals.
  • Bridge-to-permanent strategies with clear exit plan.
  • Deals with interest rate caps already in place.

The key is understanding the timeline, the execution risk, and the cost of the hedging tools being used.

Tamarack’s Approach to Debt

At Tamarack, we use debt as a stabilizing force, not a gamble. Our typical deal structures include:

  • Fixed-rate loans with 5–10 year terms.
  • Conservative leverage (sub-70% LTV).
  • Negotiated prepayment flexibility.
  • Cash flow modeling under worst-case scenarios.

We believe investors are best served when they understand the risks, not just the rewards. And debt structure is a fundamental part of that conversation.

Final Thoughts

In real estate, leverage is a tool. Like any tool, it must be used with skill and foresight.

As an investor, you don’t need to become a debt expert. But you do need to ask the right questions. Understand how your capital is impacted by interest rate movements. And choose sponsors who prioritize long-term health over short-term hype.

Because while the right debt can create opportunity, the wrong debt can derail an otherwise solid investment.

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