
With over 20 years of experience, Tyler Krug offers more than great rates—he provides clarity, confidence, and expert guidance. As founder of 210 Mortgage, his mission is to help families plant roots through homeownership. A proud Texan, Tyler earned his business degree from St. Edward’s and an MBA from Howard Payne. His approach is perso
With over 20 years of experience, Tyler Krug offers more than great rates—he provides clarity, confidence, and expert guidance. As founder of 210 Mortgage, his mission is to help families plant roots through homeownership. A proud Texan, Tyler earned his business degree from St. Edward’s and an MBA from Howard Payne. His approach is personal, precise, and transparent—giving clients tailored solutions, proactive communication, as a trusted advisor from start to finish.

As VP of Client Experience & Brand Strategy and co-owner of 210 Mortgage, Sarah Krug blends real estate expertise, customer service, and brand vision. A UT Austin grad, she began her career in real estate and quickly earned a reputation for understanding what matters most to homeowners. Sarah builds strong relationships, leads community o
As VP of Client Experience & Brand Strategy and co-owner of 210 Mortgage, Sarah Krug blends real estate expertise, customer service, and brand vision. A UT Austin grad, she began her career in real estate and quickly earned a reputation for understanding what matters most to homeowners. Sarah builds strong relationships, leads community outreach, and ensures 210 Mortgage reflects its values of trust, care, and excellence. She’s passionate about helping families feel confident at every step.

As VP of Operations, Debbie Vidal brings decades of mortgage experience. Her previous roles include underwriter, processing manager, and senior ops leader. Her blend of technical skill and strategic vision ensures high-quality results. Debbie is committed to operational excellence and a smooth experience for clients and partners. Known fo
As VP of Operations, Debbie Vidal brings decades of mortgage experience. Her previous roles include underwriter, processing manager, and senior ops leader. Her blend of technical skill and strategic vision ensures high-quality results. Debbie is committed to operational excellence and a smooth experience for clients and partners. Known for being calm under pressure with a sharp eye for detail, she ensures loans are processed efficiently and accurately—even in the most complex scenarios.
If you’ve been in real estate long enough, you’ve probably felt it — this market feels heavier than it should.
It’s not just rates. It’s not just inventory. And it’s not even affordability by itself.
It’s the combination of uncertainty, hesitation, and pressure — all happening at once — with most people quietly carrying it without a clear place to set it down.
I’ve been in mortgage lending for over 20 years and have worked through multiple market cycles. Easy ones. Difficult ones. What stands out about this season isn’t how broken things are, but how often good deals fall apart for reasons that have nothing to do with math.
Most deals don’t die because the numbers stop working. They die because confidence breaks down before clarity shows up. That’s the lens I work from.
From the lending side, the same patterns repeat.
Buyers hesitate not because they’ve made a bad decision, but because they don’t feel oriented. Agents feel pressure not because they don’t know what to do, but because they’re carrying too much uncertainty alone. Lenders get reactive because they feel responsible for outcomes they can’t fully control.
When that happens, conversations speed up, options multiply, and stress increases. Ironically, that’s when progress slows the most.
Over time, I’ve learned that the most valuable thing I can bring to a transaction isn’t a product or a rate. It’s sequence.
What matters first. What matters second. What can wait.
When people understand the path — even if it isn’t perfect — momentum usually returns.
I don’t approach deals trying to “win” them. I approach them trying to reduce surprises.
That means setting expectations early, even when they’re uncomfortable. Slowing conversations down when emotion is high. Prioritizing predictability over perfection. Communicating more than feels necessary. Never letting silence do the talking.
Experience doesn’t eliminate problems. It changes how calmly they’re handled.
I’m less interested in creative structuring than I am in clean decision-making. Less focused on speed than steadiness. Less concerned with being impressive than being reliable.
That approach isn’t flashy, but it protects reputations — especially in markets like this.
I optimize for clear next steps, calm communication, buyers who feel guided rather than pushed, agents who don’t feel exposed, and closings that feel predictable instead of dramatic.
I don’t optimize for rate-shopping conversations, urgency-driven decisions, “let’s just see if this works” deals, or chaos disguised as productivity.
That’s not a judgment — it’s alignment.
Some agents value speed above all else. Some prefer creativity over predictability. The agents I work best with value calm execution, especially when things tighten up.
I don’t believe trust is built by asking for business.
It’s built by showing up consistently, thinking clearly under pressure, making other people’s jobs easier, and being steady long before steadiness is needed.
Most of the agents I work with didn’t “switch” lenders. They reached out during a moment that felt heavy — and stayed.
If this way of thinking is ever useful, I’m always happy to be a sounding board — even if it’s just to think out loud before a buyer conversation.
No pressure. No expectation. Just perspective, when it helps.
— Tyler Krug
210 Mortgage

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