If you own rental properties, you already understand equity. It’s the value you’ve built up over time as property prices rise or mortgages get paid down. When you go to borrow against those properties for business use, the loan‑to‑value ratio (often called the LTV) is one of the first numbers a lender studies.
The LTV ratio compares how much you want to borrow against how much your property is worth. For example, if your rental duplex in Charleston appraises at $500,000 and you seek a $300,000 loan, your LTV would be 60 percent. The lower that percentage, the stronger your position as a borrower, because it shows you have more equity at stake.
Lenders use the LTV to balance opportunity and risk. A lower LTV generally means better interest rates and smoother approval because the collateral clearly covers the loan. For an operator with several beach cottages or vacation villas, keeping LTVs within a conservative range demonstrates financial stability and discipline - qualities every lender values.
There are practical ways to strengthen your LTV profile before applying:
Some owners in coastal markets see property appreciation work in their favor. When local demand rises — say, spring bookings along the South Carolina coast push values upward — updated appraisals can improve borrowing limits.
Understanding your LTV lets you walk into financing discussions from a position of knowledge. It’s not just a lender’s metric, it’s a snapshot of how much value your business has created.