Financing a church building is one of the most unique challenges in commercial real estate lending. Churches are nonprofits. Their income comes from voluntary donations. Most banks simply don’t want the headache — leaving many Texas congregations struggling to find lenders willing to work with them.
Why Banks Say No to Churches
Traditional banks evaluate commercial loans based on predictable, documentable cash flow. A retail tenant with a 10-year lease is easy to underwrite. A church whose income fluctuates with attendance and tithing habits is harder. Beyond income predictability, banks worry about collateral — a church building may have limited resale value compared to a standard commercial property. The result: churches are routinely declined by the same banks that happily fund retail centers and apartment complexes.
What Church Lenders Actually Look At
- Congregational giving history — 24-36 months of tithes and offerings. Consistent, growing giving is a strong positive signal.
- Average weekly attendance — a proxy for the congregation’s health and giving potential.
- Pastoral stability — long-tenured pastors are viewed more favorably than frequent leadership turnover.
- Denomination and affiliation — some denominations offer support systems that reduce lender risk.
- Debt-to-income ratio — regular giving must cover new debt service at 1.2x or higher.
Types of Church Loans Available in Texas
Purchase loans — for congregations buying an existing church or commercial building to convert. Down payments typically 20-35%. Construction loans — ground-up financing for new buildings or expansion. Refinance loans — lower rate, extend term, or pull equity for renovation. Bridge loans — short-term financing when buying a new facility before selling the existing building.
Documents to Prepare Before Applying
- 3 years of church financial statements
- 24-36 months of tithing and offering records
- Current attendance figures and 3-year trend
- Property information — address, value estimate, purchase price
- Church articles of incorporation and 501(c)(3) determination letter
- Board or elder board authorization to borrow
Finding the Right Church Lender in Texas
Most major banks in Texas don’t specialize in church loans. The lenders who do this well tend to be direct commercial lenders with experience in faith-based financing. Commercial Loans of Texas has been providing church and faith-based commercial loans throughout Texas since 1998. As a direct lender, they make their own underwriting decisions in-house — faster answers and more flexibility for congregations that don’t fit a standard bank template. Call 877-895-3634 or visit commercialloansoftexas.com.