How to Present MHP Financials to Commercial Lenders

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TITLE: How to Present MHP Financials to Commercial Lenders
SLUG: mhp-financials-commercial-lenders
PRIMARY_KW: mobile home park commercial lender financials
CONTENT:

How to Present MHP Financials to Commercial Lenders

When a mobile home park operator approaches a commercial lender — whether for an acquisition loan, a refinance, or a line of credit — the quality of the financial package they submit is often the difference between a smooth approval and a months-long process of follow-up requests, resubmissions, and renegotiated terms. Lenders who specialize in MHP lending have seen thousands of park financials. They know immediately whether the numbers were prepared by someone who understands the asset class or by a general bookkeeper who applied apartment building conventions to a manufactured housing community.

This guide covers what MHP commercial lenders need, how to format the financials correctly, what lenders normalize, and why clean books reduce the time and friction of every lender interaction.

What Commercial MHP Lenders Require

The standard documentation package for a commercial MHP loan includes the following components. Having all of them ready — before you begin lender conversations — signals competence and accelerates the process.

Trailing 12-month Profit and Loss Statement (T-12). The T-12 is the most important operational document in the lending package. It shows the park’s actual income and expense performance over the most recent twelve months, month by month. Monthly presentation matters — lenders can identify seasonal patterns, unusual one-time expenses, and revenue trends that an annual summary would obscure.

Current rent roll. A rent roll lists every lot in the park — occupied and vacant — with the current monthly rent, lease type (month-to-month or term), occupancy status, and the tenant’s payment status. Lenders use the rent roll to verify that the income on the T-12 is supported by actual leases, to assess vacancy, and to understand the mix of TOH and POH units. A rent roll that is clearly dated (current within 30-60 days of the application) and includes lot-level detail is far more useful than a summary-level occupancy report.

Two to three years of tax returns. Federal tax returns — individual 1040 with Schedule E, or the partnership return Form 1065 with all K-1s — provide the lender’s underwriters with a verified picture of the park’s income history. Lenders use tax returns to cross-check the T-12 and to assess whether reported income is consistent year over year. Large discrepancies between the tax return and the T-12 raise questions that slow the underwriting process.

Fixed asset schedule. A current depreciation schedule listing all depreciable assets — improvements, equipment, vehicles — and their accumulated depreciation. Lenders use this to assess the park’s capital investment history and to understand whether significant deferred maintenance may be embedded in the operations that are not showing up on the P&L.

Debt schedule. A schedule of all existing debt on the property — lender name, loan balance, interest rate, maturity date, monthly payment, and any prepayment penalty. If there are outstanding balances on any park-related debt, this schedule needs to be current and accurate.

The Lender’s First 60 Seconds: A commercial lender’s credit team reviews hundreds of loan packages. In the first 60 seconds, they are assessing whether the financials are organized, whether the income statement is formatted correctly for an MHP, and whether the NOI figure on the summary sheet is consistent with what the T-12 actually shows. A package that passes this initial credibility check moves to underwriting. A package that doesn’t gets a list of follow-up questions that delays the process by weeks.

How to Format the MHP P&L for a Lender

The income statement format that commercial MHP lenders expect follows the standard NOI waterfall. It should not look like a QuickBooks report generated for tax purposes — it should look like an investment property income statement. The format is:

Gross Scheduled Income (all lots at market rent)
- Vacancy and Credit Loss
+ Ancillary Income (RUBS, late fees, storage — separately listed)
= Effective Gross Income (EGI)

Operating Expenses (by category):
  Property Management
  Property Taxes
  Insurance
  Utilities
  Maintenance and Repairs
  Administrative
  Legal and Professional
= Total Operating Expenses

= Net Operating Income (NOI)

Debt service, depreciation, and capital expenditures appear below the NOI line if they appear at all. Mixing these items into operating expenses produces a number that is not NOI by any standard definition, and sophisticated lenders will either correct it themselves or ask you to resubmit.

What Lenders Normalize in MHP Financials

Normalization is the process of adjusting raw reported financials to reflect the park’s stabilized, repeatable income-producing potential. Lenders do this as part of underwriting whether you present normalized financials or not. Presenting normalized financials yourself — with clear explanations of each adjustment — gives you control over the narrative and prevents the lender’s team from normalizing in ways that are less favorable than your own analysis.

The standard normalization adjustments for MHP financials include:

Management fee add-back for self-managed parks. If you manage the park yourself and pay no management fee, the lender will add a market-rate management fee (typically 8-10% of EGI) to operating expenses. A self-managed park’s actual income is higher than a third-party managed park’s, but the lender underwrites the stabilized NOI assuming professional management. If you want to show the management fee benefit, it should be presented as a normalized downward adjustment to income — acknowledged, not ignored.

One-time repair expenses. A major unexpected repair — emergency well replacement, storm damage repairs not covered by insurance — may not repeat. A lender may normalize this expense out if you document it clearly as a one-time event. However, if you routinely have large “one-time” repairs every year, lenders will not accept them as non-recurring.

Non-recurring income. A large late fee payment from a collection action, a one-time easement sale, or insurance proceeds included in income should be disclosed and may be normalized out by the lender.

Owner salary drawn from operations. If you draw a salary from the park’s operating funds in addition to distributions, the lender may add it back to normalize the expense base — or may treat it as management compensation, depending on how it was classified.

Lender Coverage Ratios: What They Are Looking For

The primary underwriting ratio for commercial MHP loans is the Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR). DSCR is calculated as NOI divided by annual debt service (principal plus interest payments).

Most commercial MHP lenders require a minimum DSCR of 1.20x to 1.25x — meaning the park must generate at least $1.20 to $1.25 of NOI for every dollar of debt service. Some lenders are more conservative for smaller parks or in secondary markets.

If your park’s NOI is $150,000 and the proposed debt service is $120,000, your DSCR is 1.25x — at the minimum threshold for most lenders. If your NOI is $140,000 at the same debt service, your DSCR is 1.17x — below the threshold, which will require either a loan amount reduction or NOI improvement before approval.

This math shows why every dollar of correct, defensible NOI matters. The difference between a correctly presented NOI and an understated NOI can be the difference between loan approval and denial — or between borrowing the full amount requested and a reduced loan that requires additional equity. See our detailed guide on how to calculate mobile home park NOI correctly and our overview of NOI normalization for MHP valuations.

Common Reasons Lenders Request More Documentation

Certain characteristics of an MHP financials package reliably trigger requests for additional information. Understanding these in advance allows you to address them proactively in your initial submission.

Commingled income. If the park’s bank account was used for personal expenses, or if multiple parks share a single account, the income history is unreliable without additional explanation. Lenders want clean, property-specific financial records.

High vacancy relative to market. A park with 25% vacancy in a market where parks are typically 5-10% vacant raises questions about management quality, property condition, or market conditions. Be prepared to explain and document the vacancy history.

POH-heavy NOI. Lenders are generally less comfortable with POH income than TOH lot rent, because POH income includes home maintenance obligations and the homes themselves are depreciating assets. A park where more than 30-40% of income is POH-derived will face more scrutiny. HUD’s manufactured housing guidance through HUD’s manufactured housing programs reflects the distinct regulatory framework that lenders consider when evaluating POH-heavy portfolios.

Related-party transactions. If you pay rent to a related entity, have a management contract with an entity you control, or have loans from the park to a related party, these require disclosure and explanation. Lenders treat related-party transactions with heightened scrutiny because they may not be at market rates.

Comparison Table: Well-Prepared vs. Poorly Prepared MHP Lending Package

Component Well-Prepared Package Poorly Prepared Package
P&L format NOI waterfall with GSI, vacancy, EGI QuickBooks report with mixed categories
Rent roll Lot-level, current-date, TOH/POH distinguished Summary occupancy count only
NOI calculation Correct — pre-debt, pre-depreciation Debt service included; NOI understated or overstated
Tax returns 2-3 years provided upfront Provided only when requested
Normalization adjustments Disclosed and explained by operator Left for lender to discover and adjust
Related-party transactions Disclosed with market-rate comparison Not disclosed; discovered during due diligence

How far back do commercial MHP lenders want tax returns?

Most commercial MHP lenders want two to three years of complete tax returns — the federal return for the entity that owns the park (1065 for partnerships, 1120-S for S-corps, Schedule E attached to a 1040 for sole owners), plus the personal returns for any guarantors. If the park was acquired fewer than two years ago, they will take what is available and weight the T-12 more heavily. Some agency lenders (Fannie, Freddie, FHA) have more specific documentation requirements that differ from balance sheet lenders.

What does DSCR mean and what is a typical minimum for MHP loans?

DSCR stands for Debt Service Coverage Ratio. It is calculated as NOI divided by annual debt service (principal and interest). Most commercial MHP lenders require a minimum DSCR of 1.20x to 1.25x — the park must generate at least $1.20 in NOI for every $1.00 of debt service. Lenders in secondary markets or for smaller parks may require higher coverage ratios. The DSCR directly determines how much a lender will lend against a given NOI — which is why accurate, well-documented NOI is central to loan sizing.

Should I self-manage my MHP or use a third-party manager for better lender terms?

The lender normalizes a market-rate management fee whether you use one or not, so self-management does not artificially inflate your underwritten NOI. What self-management does affect is the lender’s perception of operational stability — some lenders view professionally managed parks as lower-risk because operations do not depend on the owner’s personal involvement. For larger loans or more conservative lenders, professional management documentation may be required or preferred. This is a lender-specific question worth asking before you apply.

Can I include POH income in my MHP loan underwriting?

Yes, POH income can be included in underwriting, but many lenders apply a haircut to POH income or underwrite it at a lower capitalization rate than TOH lot rent. This reflects the higher risk profile of POH income — the park must maintain the homes, faces higher turnover costs, and carries the home on the balance sheet as a depreciating asset. Some lenders have caps on how much of the underwritten NOI can come from POH income (e.g., no more than 20-30% POH-derived). Understand your target lender’s POH policy before you submit.

How do commingled personal and business finances affect my ability to get an MHP loan?

Commingled finances are a significant problem in MHP commercial lending. Lenders need to verify that the income and expenses on your T-12 represent the park’s operations — not your personal expenses or other businesses that share the same account. If the bank statements don’t cleanly reconcile to the income statement because personal expenses ran through the account, the lender may reduce the underwritten income, require additional documentation, or decline the application. Separate bank accounts for each park entity, maintained consistently, are a basic requirement for serious MHP operators.

Getting Ready to Approach a Commercial Lender for Your MHP?

The MHP Accountant prepares lender-ready financial packages — correctly formatted P&Ls, documented NOI, and normalized financials that reflect your park’s full value. Schedule a call before you approach a lender.

Schedule a Free 30-Minute Call

Call or text: 844-PARK-TAX | info@themhpaccountant.com

Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, lending, or tax advice. Lender requirements vary by institution, loan program, and market conditions. Consult your lender and a qualified tax professional for guidance specific to your financing situation.

HS

About the Author

Harry Shurek, EA

Harry Shurek is an Enrolled Agent and the founder of The MHP Accountant — the only CPA firm built exclusively for mobile home park owners. He specializes in MHP tax strategy, cost segregation, 1031 exchanges, entity structure, and exit planning for park investors nationwide. Learn more →

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