Strategy 04 Creative Finance

Build Your Own Home.
No Bank. No Nonsense.

The One-Time Close construction loan wraps land acquisition and build costs into a single loan — and if you already have equity in the land, that equity becomes your down payment. CCL shows you how to stack this with seller financing and IBC to build custom from the ground up with minimal cash out of pocket.

0%
Down w/ USDA OTC
1
Closing, Not Two
Land Equity
Counts as Down Payment
01
One Loan. One Close.

A traditional build requires two closings — land, then a construction loan that converts to a mortgage. The OTC combines all three into a single transaction with one set of closing costs.

02
Land Equity = Down Payment

If you own the land outright — or hold significant equity in it — the lender counts the appraised value toward your down payment requirement. Bring the lot, skip the cash.

03
The CCL Stack

Seller-finance the land with minimal out-of-pocket → build equity → OTC loan pays off the seller note → permanent mortgage. Combined with IBC, it's a complete build with near-zero cash invested.

The Core Concept

Land Equity as Your Down Payment

Most people don't realize lenders will accept land you already own as a substitute for a cash down payment. This is called "land in lieu" — and it changes the math on building from scratch entirely.

1

Lender appraises your land

The lot is formally appraised as part of the OTC application. That appraised value is your equity contribution to the total project cost.

2

Equity satisfies the down payment

FHA requires 3.5%. Conventional requires up to 20%. USDA requires 0%. If your land equity meets that threshold, you bring zero additional cash to closing.

3

One loan funds the entire build

Construction draws pay your builder at each milestone. You make interest-only payments during the build. At completion, the loan converts automatically to a permanent mortgage.

4

Seller notes get paid off at closing

If you seller-financed the land, the OTC loan pays off that note at closing — rolling everything into one permanent mortgage.

Example Deal — Land in Lieu

Land (appraised value) $60,000
Construction cost $240,000
Total project cost $300,000
FHA down payment required (3.5%) $10,500
Your land equity contribution $60,000
Additional cash needed $0
Permanent mortgage $240,000

You brought a $60K lot — acquired via seller financing — and built a $300K custom home. Zero cash down at the OTC closing. The seller note was paid off at close, and you now hold a $300K asset with a $240K mortgage.

Your Options

Three Programs. Pick Your Situation.

Every OTC program wraps land + construction + permanent financing into one loan. The difference is who qualifies and how much down payment is required.

Most Accessible

FHA One-Time Close

FHA Single-Close Construction-to-Perm

3.5%

Down Payment Required

  • Available in most markets — not rural-restricted
  • Land equity satisfies the 3.5% requirement
  • Minimum 580 credit score
  • No income limits
  • MIP (mortgage insurance) required
  • Builder must be FHA-approved

Best CCL play: seller-finance a lot in any market → FHA OTC pays off the note and funds construction → land equity covers 3.5% → zero cash at closing.

No PMI Option

Conventional OTC

Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac Single-Close

5–20%

Down Payment Required

  • If land equity ≥ 20% of project — zero PMI
  • Higher loan limits than FHA or USDA
  • No income limits, no location restrictions
  • 620+ credit score (680+ preferred by most lenders)
  • More flexibility on builder selection
  • Best for higher-value custom builds

Best CCL play: secure land with equity ≥ 20% of total project value → no PMI, no program restrictions, nothing out of pocket at closing.

The Full CCL Play

Zero Cash In. Custom Home Out.

This is how CCL clients stack seller financing, land equity, and the OTC loan into a complete build strategy.

1

Find a motivated land seller

Target landowners with free-and-clear lots willing to carry a note. Negotiate seller financing — low down, reasonable rate, short term.

2

Land appraises above your purchase price

Even modest appreciation — or buying below market — builds the equity cushion you need. The lender uses the appraised value, not what you paid.

3

Apply for the One-Time Close loan

Lender appraises the lot and the completed home value ("subject to" construction). Your land equity is credited as the down payment contribution.

4

OTC closes — seller note gets paid off

At closing, the OTC loan pays off the seller-financed land note. One clean transaction. The land becomes collateral for the construction loan.

5

Build — interest-only during construction

Draws fund your builder at each milestone. You make interest-only payments on the drawn balance — typically over 9–12 months.

6

Certificate of Occupancy → permanent mortgage

No second closing, no requalification. The loan converts automatically. You own a custom-built home from near-zero cash invested.

Deal Math — Full CCL Stack

Lot purchase price $45,000
Seller finance terms $3K down / 6% / 36 mo
Lot appraised at OTC $60,000
Construction cost $220,000
Total project value $280,000
USDA OTC loan (0% down) $220,000
OTC pays off seller note – $42,000
Net total out-of-pocket $3,000

$3,000 into the land seller's down payment. Custom home built. Permanent mortgage at $220K on a $280K asset — $60K equity at certificate of occupancy.

IBC Bridge Option

If you need capital to cover the seller's down payment requirement, borrow against your IBC policy cash value. Once the OTC closes and the seller is paid off, repay the policy — keeping the interest in your own ecosystem.

Where IBC Fits

Your Policy Funds The Gap.

The land seller needs something down. IBC solves this — borrow against your cash value, acquire the land, repay yourself when the OTC closes.

💰

Bridge the Seller Down Payment

Pull a policy loan to cover what the seller needs on the land. You're using your own capital — at your own rate — instead of going to a hard money lender.

🔄

Repay at OTC Close

The OTC closing pays off the seller note and effectively returns your down payment capital. Use those funds to repay the policy loan. Interest stays in your ecosystem.

📈

Repeat the Cycle

Policy cash value was never diminished — it grew during the loan period. Now it's available again for the next land deal. Your private bank keeps building.

🛡️

No Credit Pull. No Approval.

Policy loans don't affect your credit and require no underwriting. You move fast on the right lot with no lender approval needed for your bridge capital.

The IBC + Land & Build Loop

1
Build cash value in your IBC policy
2
Borrow against cash value → fund land seller down payment
3
Lot equity builds → OTC loan approved
4
OTC closes → seller note paid off → repay policy loan
5
Build completes → permanent mortgage → custom home owned
6
Policy restored — ready for the next land deal
Who This Is For

Is This Strategy Right for You?

This play works across very different situations. Here's who we typically see use it.

🌿

The Rural Buyer

You want land and a custom home in a rural or suburban area. USDA OTC means 100% financing on land + build with no down payment and no PMI.

🏗️

The Creative Investor

You've secured a lot via seller financing at below-market terms. The lot appraises above your purchase price. You want to use that equity spread to build — without touching personal savings.

🏦

The IBC Practitioner

You have a growing whole life or IUL policy. You want to deploy cash value productively — bridging land acquisitions, then recovering the capital at each OTC close.

Common Questions

What People Ask Before They Get Started

Do I need to own the land before applying for the OTC loan?

Not necessarily. Some lenders allow the land to be purchased at the OTC closing — rolling the acquisition directly into the loan. Others require a short seasoning period (often 6–12 months). If you've already seller-financed the lot, that note gets paid off at closing regardless.

What if the land has an existing seller note — can I still use the equity?

Yes. Most OTC lenders require the land to be free and clear at closing — but they satisfy that requirement by paying off any existing lien (including your seller note) from the loan proceeds. As long as the lot appraises for enough to cover the payoff and generate equity, you're in good shape.

How long does the construction phase last?

Typically 9–12 months for a standard single-family build. During this period you make interest-only payments on the drawn balance — not the full loan amount. Once the Certificate of Occupancy is issued, the loan converts to a fully amortizing permanent mortgage.

Can the builder be anyone I choose?

It depends on the program. USDA and FHA OTC require working with an approved/licensed general contractor. Conventional OTC typically offers more flexibility. We help you identify lenders with builder-friendly requirements in your market.

How does this work with USDA if I already own land in a rural area?

This is the ideal setup. If you own land free and clear in a USDA-eligible area, your land equity reduces the total loan amount — meaning you borrow only the construction cost at 0% down with immediate equity in the completed home.

Ready to Build?

Build the Home. Keep the Equity.

Book a free strategy call. We'll look at your land situation, target market, and IBC position — and map out exactly how to stack this strategy for your numbers.