Private Money 2nd Trust Deeds in California: The Complete Guide
Private money lending in California operates under a specific regulatory framework. Understanding how it works — and how it differs from traditional banking — is critical for anyone borrowing or lending on a 2nd trust deed.
California’s Department of Real Estate (DRE) has jurisdiction over real estate lending. But not all private money lenders are regulated the same way. Some operate as brokers. Some as direct lenders. That distinction matters significantly for how the deal gets structured, who can charge origination fees, and the timeline you can expect.
Brokers vs. Direct Lenders
Broker Model
A DRE-licensed broker acts as intermediary. They originate the loan — bringing borrowers and lenders together and structuring the deal. Actual money comes from third parties (investors, funds). Broker earns commission or origination fee.
Transactional. They’re not holding capital — they’re moving deals. Might work with 10+ lenders depending on loan size, property type, and borrower profile.
Direct Lender Model
EZ Loans is a direct lender — actually holding and deploying capital. Not brokers — we’re the money. Underwrite directly, fund directly, service the loan directly. Simpler structure because there’s no middleman.
Faster, more flexible. 2–3 weeks application to funding because we don’t coordinate with external capital sources.
Pros and Cons of Each
| Factor | Broker | Direct Lender |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | 30–45 days | 2–3 weeks |
| Number of Lenders | Multiple (rate shopping) | One (us) |
| Fees | Higher (multiple parties) | Lower (no middleman) |
| Decision Speed | Slower (third-party approval) | Faster (we decide) |
| Underwriting Flexibility | Standardized by lender | Tailored to deal |
| Communication | Through middleman | Direct to lender |
How California Regulates Private Money Lending
California’s Department of Real Estate has specific requirements for both brokers and direct lenders:
Application to Funding in California
Application (Day 1)
Submit application with basic property info, existing loan details, and amount requested. Need property tax statement, mortgage statement, basic financials. 15 minutes.
Initial Evaluation (Days 1–2)
Review property value (public records, comps), first mortgage position (title report), and equity position. No formal appraisal yet — confirming the property exists and equity is real.
Loan Estimate (Day 3)
If positive, we issue a Loan Estimate under TILA/Reg Z. Includes loan amount, rate, origination fee, points, appraisal fee, title insurance, recording fees. Federally required.
Property Appraisal (Days 4–7)
State-licensed appraiser. 5–7 days. Costs $400–$700. Quicker than a first mortgage appraisal because the property is already known.
Underwriting (Days 8–12)
Review appraisal, confirm LTV, review financial documentation. Strong equity and clear exit make this straightforward.
Title Report & Insurance (Days 8–14)
Confirm ownership, verify first mortgage position, identify liens. Title insurance for the lender. Standard California practice.
Loan Documents (Days 12–14)
Title company prepares: promissory note, deed of trust, TILA disclosures, related docs. Sign in person or electronically.
Funding (Day 15–16)
Documents signed, money wired to title. Title company records the deed of trust with the county. Funds released.
Total timeline: 2–3 weeks application to funding. Dramatically faster than bank refi (45–60 days) and faster than most broker-based deals (30–45 days).
Documentation That Matters
A lender that skips these or doesn’t follow California recording requirements exposes you (and themselves) to title issues. We follow all of them because that’s how you create a clean lien.
The Framework Works for Borrowers
California’s regulatory approach is more complex than some states, but it creates protections. DRE oversight, title insurance requirement, TILA disclosures — these create accountability.
If a lender doesn’t follow these rules, they’ve created a faulty lien. They can’t foreclose cleanly. If you ever dispute the loan or have title issues, you have recourse.
Conversely, if a lender operates sloppily — doesn’t properly record, doesn’t follow disclosure requirements, charges illegal fees — you have clear violations to point to.
This is why working with a legitimate California lender who understands the framework matters. Not finding loopholes — following the law because it protects everyone.
Why a San Diego Direct Lender Matters
EZ Loans is based in San Diego. We lend across California, but our deep knowledge is San Diego. Local property values, rental markets, development trends. Direct lender — not a broker. NMLS-registered. California DRE compliant.
When Erik reviews a 2nd trust deed application, he’s not punching data into a standardized algorithm. He’s thinking about the local market. Evaluating the specific property. Understanding your strategy. Making a decision that makes sense for both sides.
That approach takes longer than some high-volume brokers, but it also means closing deals that get rejected elsewhere. Investors with strong equity and clear strategy but non-traditional credit or income — the property is the collateral, not the credit score.
Have Questions About Your Situation?
A 15-minute conversation can clarify whether a 2nd trust deed is the right tool for your goals.
Talk to Erik