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RenoFi raises $22M Series B to scale AI-powered renovation lending

RenoFi raised a $22M Series B to scale its AI-enabled renovation lending platform, expanding access to financing based on a home’s after-renovation value rather than today’s appraisal.

Mar 5, 2026
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RenoFi, a Philadelphia-based fintech focused on home renovation financing, has raised $22 million in Series B funding to expand a lending model that underwrites against a home’s after-renovation value, rather than relying only on today’s appraised value. The round was led by Fifth Wall with participation from Progressive Insurance and additional new and existing investors.

The company said the new capital will support growth across both its technology platform and its go-to-market operations as it works to broaden access to renovation-focused home equity products.

Renovation underwriting tied to post-project value

RenoFi’s model is built around a common friction point in renovation lending: borrowers can be limited by current equity — especially when a property’s condition holds down its present value — even if a renovation would materially increase what the home is worth.

To address that, RenoFi incorporates projected post-renovation value into underwriting and borrowing capacity, an approach the company says can help homeowners qualify for renovation budgets that may be difficult to access through conventional home equity products that emphasize current valuation.

RenoFi describes its main offering as a renovation-focused line of credit and says its platform uses an AI-enabled renovation underwriting engine designed to standardize project evaluation and reduce manual processing for lending partners.

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Investor group and total capital raised

In addition to Fifth Wall and Progressive Insurance, the investor group was reported to include HighSage Ventures, Alumni Ventures, Flintlock Capital, and Gaingels, along with existing backers Canaan, First Round Capital, Curql, and TruStage Ventures.

RenoFi said the Series B brings its total capital raised to $65 million.

Expansion plans: distribution and hiring

RenoFi’s growth plan centers on expanding distribution as well as improving platform automation. The company said it plans to more than triple its retail team over the next year, alongside continued investment in product development and operational scaling.

For real estate professionals, the distribution push is notable because renovation financing often becomes a time-sensitive need—during listing prep, after inspection negotiations, or when buyers are weighing properties that require repairs. More standardized, point-of-need access to renovation financing can reduce uncertainty around project feasibility and budget.

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Use cases in real estate transactions

Renovation financing typically arises in several repeat scenarios:

  • Listing preparation and pre-sale improvements: sellers funding repairs or upgrades to improve marketability.
  • Buyers targeting homes that need work: borrowers seeking financing that reflects post-improvement value rather than the home’s as-is condition.
  • Equity-light homeowners: recent buyers or homeowners early in the amortization cycle with limited tappable equity through traditional products.

RenoFi positions itself as a partner-driven platform that works with credit unions and other lending partners, rather than a bank originating loans on its own balance sheet.

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Scale and footprint

RenoFi has reported facilitating more than 8,000 renovation loans totaling more than $1.5 billion in funded volume, analyzing about $2 billion in renovation project value, and operating in 48 states. The company also said it attracts more than 10,000 new homeowners per month.

What to watch

The Series B round adds momentum to a broader push among fintechs to modernize renovation lending — particularly by underwriting to after-renovation value and using automation to reduce processing time. For agents and brokerages, the near-term question is whether these products become easier to access at key transaction moments, especially for clients who need renovation capital but are constrained by current equity and valuation.

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