What is it? (plain English)
The Four Pillars are the framework we use to evaluate any private-lending deal: Borrower, Asset, Structure, and Exit. Every deal stands on these four, and they're interdependent — when one is weaker, another usually has to be stronger to balance it.
Who is it for?
Every real estate investor seeking private capital — and anyone who wants to present stronger deals and negotiate better terms.
When might it make sense?
From the very first look at a deal. Running a deal through the Four Pillars before you bring it to a lender tells you where it's strong, where it's exposed, and what you'll need to shore up.
Good to know
Borrower — your experience, track record, and liquidity. Asset — the property's value, condition, location, and marketability. Structure — term, draw schedule, reserves, and how risk is shared. Exit — how the loan gets repaid; the pillar weighed most heavily. A deal strong on three pillars but weak on the exit is still a risky deal.
Potential advantages
A consistent way to screen deals fast, present them credibly, anticipate a lender's concerns, and avoid funding a deal that's weak in more than one area.
Potential limitations
The framework is a discipline, not a guarantee — it surfaces risk; it doesn't remove it.
Documents you may need
An honest read on your experience and liquidity, supportable property numbers, a structure that matches your timeline, and a documented (ideally layered) exit.
Questions to ask before you choose
- Which pillar is my deal's weakest?
- Can a stronger structure offset a weaker asset or borrower profile?
- Is my exit credible and backed up?
- Would I lend on this deal myself?
How Kyon helps
We evaluate every deal against the Four Pillars with you — turning it into a shared checklist that makes your deal stronger and your decision clearer, before any capital is committed.