203k deals don’t usually fail because of underwriting. They fail because of avoidable mistakes made early. Here are the five we see most often – and how to avoid every one of them.
Mistake #1: Picking a contractor who’s never done a 203k
This is the #1 reason 203k deals fall apart. A great remodeler who’s never been through a 203k will:
- Write a bid that doesn’t match the consultant’s scope
- Expect a big upfront deposit (203k doesn’t allow it)
- Not have cash reserves to front materials between draws
- Give up when the paperwork feels like too much
How to avoid it: Use a contractor who’s closed at least 3 previous 203k projects. If you don’t have one, use a lender who has a network of them (we do – nationwide).
Mistake #2: Scope creep after underwriting starts
You get under contract. The consultant walks the property. Bids come in. Then you decide you want to add a half-bath. Or upgrade the kitchen cabinets. Or finish the basement.
Every change resets parts of the underwriting. The appraisal may need to be reopened. The contractor has to re-bid. The consultant has to revise the Work Write-Up. Days turn into weeks.
How to avoid it: Plan your entire rehab scope BEFORE the consultant visits. Walk through the property with a notebook, list every change you want, and get it all into the initial write-up. Don’t treat the bid phase as a time to brainstorm.
Mistake #3: Documentation gaps that stall underwriting
The documents we see forgotten most often:
- Recent pay stubs (we need the last 30 days)
- Signed, dated gift letters (not just a text from Mom saying “here’s the money”)
- Donor bank statements showing the gift funds existed before transfer
- Explanations for large deposits (“what’s this $4,200 deposit from last Tuesday?”)
- Two full years of self-employment tax returns
- Current homeowners insurance quote
How to avoid it: Assemble all of your documents BEFORE you apply. Have a simple Google Drive folder ready. And for every large deposit or unusual money movement in the last 60 days, have a written explanation ready.
Mistake #4: Assuming the appraisal will come in at the right number
203k appraisals have TWO values: as-is and after-repair. Both matter.
If the as-is value is too low, you may need to renegotiate the purchase price with the seller. If the after-repair value is too low, your loan won’t support the rehab budget you planned.
Appraisers are human. They can come in low – especially in neighborhoods with limited comps.
How to avoid it:
- Check comps yourself on Zillow or Redfin before you offer
- Have your agent pull MLS comps for after-repair analysis
- Build a little cushion into your offer price – don’t offer top-of-budget
- Work with a lender who can challenge low appraisals with additional comps (we do this regularly)
Mistake #5: Unrealistic timeline expectations
Most 203k deals need 45–60 days to close. Standard 203k with structural work needs 60–75 days. Yet we constantly see buyers write offers with 30-day close timelines.
What happens:
- Seller panics when we ask for an extension
- Deal gets rocky right at appraisal
- Per diem fees kick in if seller’s patience runs out
- Sometimes the deal dies entirely
How to avoid it: Write offers with realistic timelines. 50–60 days for Limited, 60–75 for Standard. Sellers may push back, but it’s much better to negotiate a longer timeline upfront than to fail to close.
Bonus mistake: Working with a lender who “can do” 203k
A lender who “can do” 203k is not the same as a lender who specializes in it. Generalist lenders:
- Take 3–4x longer to close
- Miss obvious issues until they’re urgent
- Don’t know which consultants or contractors to recommend
- Can’t push back effectively on low appraisals
- Have no relationships with HUD, consultants, or FHA processors
We’ve closed more 203k loans than most lenders will ever see. That’s the single biggest reason our files close – even the complicated ones.
Working with us
Pre-qualify in 60 seconds and we’ll walk through your situation – scope, contractor status, timeline, budget – and flag any red flags BEFORE you’re under contract. The best way to avoid these mistakes is to plan around them from day one.