Wilshire Quinn Capital, Inc. is a San Francisco-based hard money lender operating as a direct lender rather than a broker. The company specializes in short-term bridge financing for real estate transactions, with particular strength in San Francisco's competitive market where they understand the urgency of closing quickly. Founded to serve the fast-paced needs of real estate investors, Wilshire Quinn positions itself as an alternative to traditional lending institutions that move too slowly for competitive bidding situations.
Wilshire Quinn offers hard money loans ranging from $200,000 to $20 million with typical closing in 5-7 days and pre-approval within 24 hours. Their loans feature interest-only payments, loan terms of 3-24 months, interest rates between 8.5%-12%, and origination fees of 1-5 points. They finance numerous property types including single-family investments, multi-family properties, condominiums, retail centers, office buildings, industrial warehouses, hotels, healthcare facilities, and mixed-use properties. Loan-to-value ratios reach up to 60% of appraised value, with rehab loans going up to 60% of ARV (not exceeding 80-90% of purchase price depending on program). They maintain first trust deed position exclusively and operate nationwide, primarily in metropolitan and coastal areas.
Wilshire Quinn distinguishes itself through direct lending (no broker middlemen), exceptionally fast turnaround times competitive for San Francisco's high-velocity market, and asset-based underwriting that prioritizes property equity over borrower credit scores. Their 24-hour pre-approval process and ability to fund within days rather than weeks gives borrowers the cash-offer credibility needed to win bidding wars in competitive markets. They explicitly target investors, flippers, builders, business owners needing liquidity, and borrowers who cannot qualify for traditional bank financing.
The primary honest caveat is that hard money loans carry significantly higher costs than conventional mortgages—interest rates of 8.5%-12% plus 1-5 points in origination fees represent substantially elevated borrowing costs. These loans are inherently short-term (3-24 months) and require borrowers to have exit strategies like property sales, permanent financing, or refinancing. The high LTV caps (60% standard, up to 80-90% on rehab) mean borrowers need substantial equity or cash reserves. This product is genuinely valuable for time-sensitive real estate transactions but is expensive and unsuitable for primary residence financing or long-term mortgages.