Across the commercial real estate and business lending markets, one phrase is appearing more frequently: the commercial loan maturity wall.
The term refers to the large volume of commercial mortgages and business loans scheduled to mature within a relatively short period of time. In the United States alone, hundreds of billions of dollars in commercial loans are expected to mature each year through 2026 and beyond.
For borrowers, this creates a growing wave of refinancing pressure.
Many property owners and business borrowers assume refinancing will be simple. Historically, that assumption was often correct.
Today, however, the lending environment has changed.
Interest rates are higher than when many loans were originally issued. Lending standards have tightened. Asset valuations have shifted across several sectors.
As a result, refinancing is no longer automatic. It requires deliberate planning and strategic capital preparation.
Borrowers who wait until the final months before maturity frequently face difficult outcomes. Experienced sponsors typically begin preparing 12 to 18 months before a loan comes due.
Commercial loans differ significantly from residential mortgages.
Most commercial loans have terms of five to ten years, with a balloon payment due at maturity. At that point, the borrower must either refinance the debt, sell the asset, or pay off the remaining balance.
In stable capital markets, refinancing is usually routine.
However, the current lending cycle presents several challenges.
Many commercial loans were originated during a historically low interest rate environment. Borrowers who financed assets at rates near 3–4% may now face significantly higher refinancing costs.
Lenders evaluate refinance requests using current property values and income performance. If asset values or income have declined, the new loan amount available may be lower than expected.
Banks and institutional lenders are applying more conservative underwriting criteria, including:
Lower loan-to-value limits
Higher debt-service coverage requirements
Additional reserve requirements
These factors can create refinancing risk — the possibility that a borrower cannot replace the existing loan balance at maturity.
This risk is why the maturity wall has become such an important topic in today’s commercial lending environment.
Many borrowers begin exploring refinance options 90 days before loan maturity.
By that point, their negotiating leverage is extremely limited.
When time is short, lenders recognize that the borrower has fewer alternatives. Loan terms may become stricter, pricing increases, and the borrower’s flexibility disappears.
In these situations, borrowers may be forced into:
High-cost bridge loans
Short-term loan extensions
Equity recapitalizations
Distressed asset sales
The common theme is reactive decision-making rather than proactive capital planning.
Experienced sponsors approach loan maturity very differently.
Instead of reacting at the last minute, they begin preparing 12–18 months in advance. This allows time to evaluate financing options, address operational issues, and structure the best capital solution.
The first step is understanding how much debt the property can realistically support today.
This requires evaluating:
Current net operating income
Market capitalization rates
Debt-service coverage ratios
Current lender leverage standards
A realistic valuation prevents unpleasant surprises later in the refinancing process.
Many properties today face what lenders call a refinance gap.
This occurs when the amount a lender is willing to provide is smaller than the existing loan balance.
Example:
Existing loan balance: $15M
New loan available: $12M
Refinance gap: $3M
Identifying this gap early allows borrowers to explore solutions such as:
Preferred equity
Mezzanine financing
Strategic recapitalization
Additional sponsor equity
Waiting until maturity often eliminates these options.
Commercial lending timelines can be lengthy.
Institutional lenders often require extensive documentation, including:
Updated property appraisals
Environmental reports
Operating statements
Tenant and leasing history
Starting conversations early allows borrowers to understand how lenders view the asset and provides time to address any issues before underwriting begins.
Lenders focus heavily on the stability of future income.
Twelve months provides time to improve operational performance, such as:
Increasing occupancy
Renewing important tenant leases
Reducing operating expenses
Stabilizing rental income
Addressing deferred maintenance
Small operational improvements can significantly influence refinancing terms.
Sophisticated borrowers rarely rely on a single lender.
Instead, they develop multiple potential capital paths, which may include:
Banks
Debt funds
Insurance company lenders
CMBS lenders
Private credit providers
The objective is simple: create optionality before urgency appears.
Borrowers with options control the process. Borrowers without them must accept whatever terms are available.
While many discussions about the maturity wall focus on refinancing risk, experienced investors understand that capital cycles also create opportunity.
When borrowers cannot refinance, the market often experiences:
Distressed property sales
Recapitalization opportunities
Loan note sales at discounts
New equity partnerships entering deals
In other words, the maturity wall reshapes the landscape.
For borrowers who prepare early, it can be successfully navigated. For investors with available capital, it may create some of the most attractive acquisition opportunities in years.
Loan maturity should never be treated as a last-minute event.
It is a strategic capital planning milestone.
Borrowers who begin planning at least 12 months before maturity give themselves time to solve problems, strengthen assets, and secure the right financing partners.
Those who wait until the final months often discover that refinancing is no longer routine.
In today’s lending environment, capital strategy matters more than ever.
About the Author
Don McClain is Founder & Principal of Fast Commercial Capital, a nationwide capital advisory firm specializing in commercial real estate financing, bridge loans, and structured capital solutions. Through the Medro Advisors Platform — which includes Fasty Funding, Alianza Partners, and Amable Properties — he works with investors, business owners, and sponsors across the United States on real estate financing, business acquisitions, and strategic capital solutions.