In commercial real estate, sophisticated transactions rarely rely on just senior debt and sponsor equity.
As projects become larger and more complex, additional layers of structured capital are often introduced to bridge financing gaps, improve leverage, and optimize investor returns.
Two of the most commonly used forms of structured capital are:
and
Although these financing tools are frequently discussed together, they operate very differently within a commercial real estate capital stack.
Understanding how preferred equity and mezzanine debt work is essential for investors, sponsors, lenders, and developers evaluating modern commercial real estate transactions.
Across the broader Medro Advisor ecosystem — including Fast Commercial Capital, Fasty Funding, America’s Loan Source, Alianza Partners, and Amable Properties — structured capital and layered financing strategies are an increasingly important part of commercial real estate and investment advisory discussions.
Under the leadership of Don McClain, Founder & Principal of Fast Commercial Capital, the focus remains on understanding how capital structure impacts risk, leverage, execution, and long-term investment performance.
A simplified commercial real estate capital stack often includes:
Senior Debt
Mezzanine Debt
Preferred Equity
Sponsor/Common Equity
Each layer carries:
different risk levels
different return expectations
different control rights
As capital moves lower in the stack:
risk generally increases
return expectations rise
repayment priority decreases
Mezzanine debt is subordinate financing that sits behind senior debt but ahead of equity in the capital stack.
Unlike a traditional mortgage loan, mezzanine debt is typically secured by:
rather than a direct mortgage on the property itself.
Mezzanine financing is commonly used when:
senior lenders limit leverage
sponsors want to reduce equity requirements
projects require additional capital to close
Mezzanine debt often includes:
higher interest rates than senior loans
shorter loan terms
structured repayment schedules
intercreditor agreements with senior lenders
foreclosure rights tied to equity interests
Because mezzanine lenders occupy a subordinate position, they typically seek:
stronger yield
enhanced control rights
additional protections
Preferred equity is an equity investment positioned above common equity but below debt in the capital stack.
Preferred equity investors generally receive:
priority distributions
preferred returns
negotiated rights and protections
Unlike mezzanine lenders, preferred equity investors are technically:
Preferred equity is frequently used to:
reduce sponsor cash requirements
improve leverage
structure recapitalizations
enhance projected investor returns
Preferred equity structures may include:
fixed preferred returns
accrued return components
participation rights
approval rights over major decisions
negotiated buyout provisions
Preferred equity can sometimes provide:
greater flexibility
less restrictive covenant structures
more collaborative sponsor relationships
compared to mezzanine financing.
Although both occupy middle positions within the capital stack, there are important distinctions.
structured as a loan
secured by ownership interests
includes lender remedies
generally carries fixed repayment obligations
often includes foreclosure rights
structured as equity
receives preferred distributions
may include participation rights
typically has less direct foreclosure authority
often more flexible structurally
Modern commercial real estate transactions often require financing beyond senior debt.
Sponsors may use preferred equity or mezzanine financing to:
maximize leverage
preserve sponsor ownership
improve projected IRRs
reduce upfront equity contributions
bridge financing gaps
recapitalize existing projects
These tools are especially common in:
development projects
value-add acquisitions
transitional assets
institutional-scale transactions
Although structured capital can improve leverage and flexibility, it also introduces additional complexity and risk.
Potential risks include:
refinancing pressure
increased debt burden
intercreditor conflicts
cash flow strain
market volatility exposure
execution risk
Higher leverage can amplify returns during strong market conditions —
but it can also magnify losses during downturns.
This is why sophisticated underwriting and disciplined capital structuring remain critical.
Institutional investors often analyze:
leverage ratios
DSCR
LTV
cap rates
projected IRR
exit timing
sponsor experience
market conditions
Preferred equity and mezzanine debt are rarely evaluated in isolation.
Instead, they are viewed within the broader context of:
overall capital structure
business plan execution
long-term investment strategy
Across the Medro ecosystem, structured finance concepts continue playing a growing role in discussions involving:
commercial real estate finance
bridge lending
investment property financing
recapitalizations
capital advisory
investor-focused financing solutions
This broader ecosystem includes:
Fast Commercial Capital
Fasty Funding
America’s Loan Source
Alianza Partners
Amable Properties
The ecosystem focuses on helping investors, operators, and business owners better understand financing structures, capital solutions, and execution-focused strategies across both commercial and residential real estate finance.
Preferred equity and mezzanine debt are both powerful tools within modern commercial real estate finance.
Although they share similarities, their:
legal structures
risk profiles
control rights
investor expectations
…are materially different.
Understanding those differences is essential when evaluating:
leverage strategies
risk allocation
refinancing structures
long-term investment performance
Because ultimately:
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, Amable Properties, and America’s Loan Source — he works with investors, business owners, and sponsors across the United States on commercial financing, residential investor lending (1–4 units), business acquisitions, and strategic capital solutions.
Fast Commercial Capital operates nationwide with offices in Miami, Austin, and San Diego.