Land equity take-out in BC & Alberta (serviced lots + raw land)

Borrow against vacant land with real expectations—then get a clean Plan A / Plan B.

Accessing equity from land is rarely a standard home equity play. Lenders focus on land type, servicing, access, zoning, and your exit strategy (hold, build, or develop). I'll confirm what's actually financeable, then structure the cleanest funding path.

30-minute call. Bring the parcel details (listing/MLS or legal description), servicing level (serviced/partial/raw), and your plan (hold / build timeline / development milestones).

Licensed Mortgage Agent (BC, AB) • Funded over $200M • 5-star Google rating

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What I can Help With

  • Equity take-out for serviced residential lots

    If the lot is in an established market with clear servicing and buildability, we pursue the most straightforward land-equity options first.

  • Equity take-out for raw / rural / complex land

    For raw land, unusual zoning, or thin comparable sales, we structure options realistically—often using niche or private pathways when mainstream lenders won't play.

  • Staged funding for build or development plans

    If the goal is permits, servicing, rezoning, or bridge-to-build, we build a staged plan with a clear “what happens next” so lenders understand the repayment story.

About Michael Browne

I help BC and Alberta clients make clean financing decisions when the property isn't “standard”—and land is one of the clearest examples of that.

You'll get straight answers upfront: what's realistically financeable, what's risky, what documents matter, and the cleanest path to funding based on your land category and plan.

Michael Browne, Mortgage Agent serving BC and Alberta

What working with me looks like

You can start two ways, depending on how sure you are.

Option 1: Full review upfront

Best if the land is raw/rural, the plan involves servicing/rezoning, or you need meaningful equity. We confirm the gatekeepers early and structure a lender-ready story that matches your exit plan.

Option 2: Start light, then go deeper

Best if you're exploring. We start with the minimum needed to answer: Is this land financeable? What leverage range is realistic? What's the cleanest pathway? Then we go deeper only if the upside is real.

Ready for real options?

Don't treat land like a normal home equity take-out.

If it's doable, we'll structure the cleanest path and execute it. If it's not (or not yet), you'll know why—and what would need to change.

Why this works

The best land-equity outcomes happen when expectations are set early: land is harder to value and sell than a home, so fewer lenders participate and leverage is often lower—especially for raw land.

We reduce surprises by focusing on what lenders actually care about:

  • Servicing level (serviced vs raw is the biggest swing factor)
  • Access and marketability (how liquid is this land in this market?)
  • Zoning/permitted use (and any constraints like covenants/easements)
  • Exit strategy (sell, build and refinance, or milestone-based development)

Land situations that often need proper translation:

  • Serviced residential lot vs partially serviced vs raw land
  • Zoning complexity (ALR/agricultural constraints, residential vs mixed use, etc.)
  • Thin comparable sales (appraisal sensitivity)
  • Funding permits/servicing/rezoning with a clear milestone plan
  • Bridge-to-build planning (land now → construction later)
  • Project size changing the lender universe (individual land lending vs development finance)

When the story is packaged clearly and the gatekeepers are checked early, land equity becomes predictable.

Not sure where you stand? Let's get you clarity.

Book a 30-minute call and I'll tell you what looks realistic for land equity, what's risky, and the cleanest next step—so you don't rely on assumptions.

Common questions about accessing equity from vacant land

Two people reviewing mortgage options together at a kitchen table
Can I access equity from vacant land in BC or Alberta?+
Often, yes—but it's typically structured more like a land loan/land refinance than a standard home equity take-out. Servicing, access, zoning, and marketability drive the options.
How much equity can I access from a serviced lot vs raw land?+
It depends. Leverage is tied to land type. Private land loans often quote lower leverage ranges (commonly cited roughly 40%–65% LTV), while some development finance products can quote higher leverage for qualifying projects and larger loans.
Does zoning (or ALR/agricultural status) affect land equity financing?+
Yes. Zoning and permitted use are core gatekeepers. Restrictions, covenants, easements, or development approvals can change lender appetite and leverage.
What access and servicing do lenders usually require?+
Common themes: clearer servicing (water/sewer or septic feasibility, power) and reliable access tend to improve lender comfort. Raw/unserviced lots are typically tougher.
Can I use land equity to fund permits, rezoning, or servicing costs?+
Yes—this is one of the most common reasons land equity is sought. Lenders usually want a clear milestone plan and exit strategy.
If I plan to build, should I access equity now or set up a land-to-construction plan?+
Often the cleanest approach is staged: land/equity now → transition to construction financing once plans, permits, and builder contracts are ready. We'll map the cleanest sequence for your timeline.
Will I need an appraisal?+
Almost always. Land appraisals can be more sensitive (especially rural/raw) because comparable sales can be sparse, which affects leverage.
What documents should I expect to provide?+
Typically: parcel/legal details, zoning/permitted use, any covenants/easements, servicing/access confirmations, and your plan (hold/build/develop). Requirements vary by lender and land type.
Is this available through banks, or is it usually private lending?+
It depends on the land category and marketability. Some serviced lots can fit more mainstream routes; raw/complex land often pushes the deal toward niche/private land lending. Project size can also open development finance options.

Still have a question?

Send a quick note and we’ll reply within one business day.

Land is different—don't guess.

Get a clean land equity plan—Plan A and Plan B.

Either we confirm a clean equity path quickly—or we map what needs to change (documents, land category, or timeline) so you can access land equity predictably and responsibly.

Or call 672-699-6459