Finance & Mortgages

    Leverage

    The use of borrowed money to control a larger investment, which can magnify both returns and risk.

    Leverage is using borrowed funds so that a smaller amount of an investor's own cash controls a larger asset. When the property performs well, leverage magnifies the return on the cash invested. This is positive leverage.

    Leverage also increases risk. If the property underperforms or values fall, the same borrowing magnifies the loss, which is negative leverage.

    On the exam

    Leverage uses debt to amplify return on invested cash. More leverage means more potential reward and more risk.

    Exam trap

    Leverage is about debt, not appreciation. Appreciation is a rise in value; leverage is the use of borrowed money.

    Tested in

    Investments and Business Brokerage (2% of the exam)

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    This definition is Florida real estate exam-prep education, not legal, tax, or professional advice. Verify current rules against the official source before relying on them for a real transaction. Back to the full glossary.