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Fix and Flip Loan Draw Process Explained: How In-House Servicing Provide More Reliable Funding

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The Draw Process Is Your Cash Flow Engine

Most new fix-and-flip investors focus on getting the loan approved. But draw management, not loan approval, controls your project timeline and profit.

Your closing might be fast and take only a week. But the real work happens afterwards during the loan servicing phase. You create value over the next few months as you rehab the property and get it ready for sale.

After the deal closes, your project moves as soon as you get reimbursed for completed work. Draw servicing is what keeps contractors working, materials arriving, and timelines on track.

And this is where many investors get caught off guard.

A delayed draw slows everything. Contractors stop work. Material orders get pushed back. The project loses momentum. Every extra day adds cost and reduces profit.

To understand how to avoid these issues, let us look at what makes draw management smooth and predictable.

The Three Pillars of Reliable Draw Management in Fix and Flip Loans

Strong draw management rests on three pillars:

  1. Clear paperwork
  2. An objective inspection
  3. Responsive servicing

Each step supports the next. When your paperwork is complete, the inspection is simple. When the inspection is clear, funding moves faster. An integrated and accessible draw team keeps the process consistent.

The Essential Documents for Every Draw Request

Every lender asks for the same basic documents. When they are complete, the draw moves quickly. When they are not, delays are likely.

1. Draw Request Form

This is your formal request for funds. It lists the budget line items you are drawing from and the amounts you need. A clear, itemized form helps the team order the inspection right away.

2. Lien Waivers

Lien waivers protect you and the lender from mechanics lien claims after work is complete.

Most lenders require waivers with no conditions. This ensures a clean title when you sell or refinance the property.

3. Invoices and Receipts

Invoices show who did the work and what they were paid.

Each invoice must include proof of payment, such as a cleared check, ACH confirmation, or wire record. The lender uses these documents to check that your draw request matches the actual work completed.

4. Updated Budget Line Items

Your budget is the financial map of the rehab. It shows: 

  • Line item totals
  • Funds already paid
  • Progress percentage
  • Remaining funds
  • Contingency used

A clear update helps the inspector match your request to the work done on site.

Why This Preparation Matters

A complete submission speeds up the inspection order. Most delays come from missing or mismatched paperwork, not from the inspector or the lender.

How We Manage Draws at Stormfield

Stormfield’s servicing team manages all draw requests in-house. This removes handoffs, reduces delays, and keeps communication clear and simple.

Understanding the Inspection Process in Fix and Flip Loans

Once you submit your draw, the lender orders a third-party inspection. The inspector will:

  • Visit the property
  • Check the progress for each budget line item
  • Take photos as proof
  • Convert that progress into the dollars that can be released

See which loan actually fits your flip.

Flipping succeeds when money flows at the same pace as the work. A structured fix & flip loan keeps your project moving, while generic hard money often slows it down.

How Inspectors Convert Progress Into Dollars

Inspection reports usually include:

  • Total Budget Amount: Approved amount for the line item
  • Prior Completion %: What was funded previously
  • This Inspection %: Updated progress
  • Eligible from Last Draw: Amount already unlocked
  • Current Amount Available: New money unlocked

Example

Budget: $8,000
Prior completion: 50% → $4,000
New completion: 95% → $7,600
Current Amount Available = $7,600 – $4,000 = $3,600

This is common when only a small detail is unfinished.

A Quick Note on Materials

Most lenders reimburse materials only after installation. Some allow a small percentage upfront when materials are delivered and stored on site, if you provide proof of payment and the inspector verifies them.

Always confirm your lender’s policy before planning material-heavy stages.

In-House vs. Outsourced Draw Management

The three pillars of draw management all depend on who is coordinating the process. Lenders use one of two models:

  1. In-house loan servicing
  2. Third-party servicers

Why In-House Servicing Creates More Predictable Funding

An in-house team works inside the lender’s own systems and priorities. This gives borrowers three benefits:

1. Unified Communication

Fewer handoffs mean quicker answers and updates from one point of contact.

2. Faster Issue Resolution

If you disagree with an inspection detail, the in-house reviewer can check the photos, confirm the work, and clear the item faster. There are no long ticket queues or multiple layers of approval.

3. Consistency Across All Draws

A fix-and-flip project has several draws. When the same team handles all of them, decisions stay consistent and timelines stay predictable.

How Outsourced Teams Work

Third-party servicers support many lenders. Their processes are standardized. This adds layers between your request and your funding decision. More layers can reduce responsiveness during tight project timelines.

Stormfield’s Approach

Stormfield manages draw servicing for fix-and-flip loans in-house. This gives borrowers the speed, communication, and consistency needed to keep projects moving. You can read about the workflow at stormfieldcapital.com/loan-servicing.

Predictable Cash Flow Drives Profitable Fix and Flip Loans

In a fix-and-flip project, reliable draws protect your profit. When draw payments are consistent, the project stays on schedule.

Approvals, interest rates, and closing speed matter. But after the deal is funded, your project only moves as fast as your draw payments.

When draws arrive on time, contractors stay on site, materials show up as planned, and each stage moves at the right pace. The project stays under control.

When draws slow down, the reverse happens. Contractors leave for other jobs, materials get delayed, and the project loses rhythm. Costs rise, and profit shrinks. Even a small delay can change the outcome.

A fix-and-flip is a business. Predictable cash flow is essential. Choose a lending partner whose draw process fits the way you work.

This is not a minor service detail. It is a real risk decision. You are managing contractors, materials, and deadlines. Reliable draw servicing is worth more than a slightly lower rate or a faster closing.

Every flipper should ask one simple question before choosing a lender:

“Who is managing my draw requests, and how fast do they fund?”

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Stormfield Capital is a direct balance-sheet lender offering financing solutions for residential investment projects, including fix and flip, bridge, and new construction loans. With fast decisions, consistent draw processes, and reliable funding, Stormfield supports investors across the Northeast and other key U.S. markets.

If you’re evaluating financing for an upcoming flip, Stormfield’s team can help you compare your options and understand the best structure for your project. Contact us to discuss your deal or get a quick quote.

Frequently Asked Questions

1 Are fix and flip loans the same as hard money loans?

Fix and flip loans are a type of hard money loan, but they are more specialized and structured for renovation-heavy projects.

Hard money loans are often simpler because they are asset-focused. Fix and flip loans require a renovation plan but offer better structure.

Not always. Fix and flip loans almost always include rehab funding. Hard money loans may not or the draw system may be inconsistent.

Most modern fix and flip lenders close very quickly. Hard money loans can also be fast, but timing varies more.

Fix and flip loans usually provide higher leverage across both acquisition and renovation.
Wesley W. Carpenter - Stormfield Capital

Wesley W. Carpenter

Co-Founder & Partner

Wesley Carpenter is a Founder and Partner of Stormfield Capital, LLC. At Stormfield, Wes leads the firm’s investment strategy and portfolio management. He serves on both the management and investment committees and plays a central role in credit and risk oversight across the platform. Under his leadership, Stormfield has deployed over $1.75 billion, spanning the origination, acquisition, and asset management of commercial and residential bridge loans.

Wes brings more than 15 years of experience in real estate credit and structured finance. Prior to founding Stormfield, he was a Vice President at Greenwich Associates, a boutique consultancy specializing in the financial services sector, where he advised senior executives at commercial and investment banks on balance sheet optimization and the adoption of structured credit strategies. He began his career in Corporate Development at Illinois Tool Works (NYSE: ITW), where he focused on M&A and strategic growth initiatives across the firm’s global industrial portfolio

Wes holds a B.S. from Fairfield University and an M.B.A. from Binghamton University.