DSCR Loan Requirements Explained: The 12 Questions Investors Keep Asking (With Real Examples)
- Trevor Higgins
- Jan 26
- 8 min read
Updated: 21 hours ago

DSCR Loans: A Comprehensive Guide for First-Time Homebuyers and Investors
DSCR loans are investment-property mortgages that qualify primarily on property cash flow (rent ÷ PITIA), not your personal income. In Charlotte, most DSCR programs look for DSCR around 1.00–1.25+, 20–25% down (typical), and 3–12 months of reserves, with stronger pricing at higher DSCR and higher credit scores. This guide answers the 12 DSCR questions investors ask most—DSCR math, appraisal rent comps (1007), STR/PadSplit income approaches, credit/LTV, and cash-out rules—using simple examples you can copy into your deal analysis.
Trevor Higgins (NMLS 1410557) is a Charlotte-based mortgage lender & broker, lending nationwide to real estate investors.
Last updated: February 202
DSCR Loan Requirements Snapshot (Typical Starting Points)
DSCR: ~1.00–1.25+ (higher is better -> There are options for under 1.0)
Down payment / LTV (purchase): often 75–80% LTV (20–25% down -> Potentially 15% down but not common)
Reserves: often 3–12 months PITIA
Credit score: many programs start around 660+; 680–700+ improves pricing
Cash-out refi: often 70–75% LTV with seasoning and a new appraisal (Reduced to no seasoning may be possible on a case by case basis)
Rent used for DSCR: commonly appraiser market rent via 1007 (unless a refinance)
Understanding DSCR Loans
A DSCR loan (Debt Service Coverage Ratio loan) is a non-QM (non-qualified mortgage) designed for investment properties where qualification is based primarily on property cash flow, not the borrower’s personal DTI. Instead of pay stubs and tax returns, the underwriter asks: Does the property’s rent cover the mortgage payment?
Core formula: DSCR = Gross Monthly Rent ÷ Monthly PITIA (Principal, Interest, Taxes, Insurance, HOA if any).
Typical thresholds: Minimum 1.00–1.25 depending on the program. Higher DSCRs usually price better.
Use cases: 1–4 unit rentals (SFR/duplex/tri/4-plex), and some 5+ unit small commercial programs (varies by lender).
Ownership: Many DSCR programs allow LLC vesting.
Docs: Streamlined asset/credit review; property income drives the decision.
Example: If a duplex rents for $3,600/mo total and PITIA is $2,700/mo, then DSCR = 3,600 ÷ 2,700 = 1.33. That meets most programs and usually yields better pricing than a DSCR at 1.10.
Takeaway: DSCR loans help self-employed and portfolio investors scale faster because approval isn’t limited by personal DTI. The deal must still stand on its own math.
How is DSCR calculated (rent ÷ PITIA) with real numbers?
To calculate the DSCR, use the formula: DSCR = Gross Monthly Rent ÷ Monthly PITIA. Compute PITIA using the proposed loan (rate, loan amount, term) and add property taxes, insurance, and HOA dues if applicable. Use the lower of actual lease or appraiser’s market rent (Form 1007 rent schedule) when the program requires it.
Gross Monthly Rent (GMR): Usually the subject’s rent before expenses.
PITIA: Monthly Principal + Interest + Taxes + Insurance + HOA.
Example 1 (Long-Term Rental)
Market rent (1007): $2,400
PITIA (based on quoted rate, taxes, insurance): $2,000
DSCR = 2,400 ÷ 2,000 = 1.20 → typically approvable.
Example 2 (Townhome with HOA)
Gross rent: $2,800
P&I: $1,950; Taxes/Ins: $450; HOA: $200 → PITIA $2,600
DSCR = 2,800 ÷ 2,600 = 1.08 → below many targets; improve by buying down rate, adding down payment, or targeting stronger rent.
Tip: To improve DSCR, reduce PITIA (bigger down, better rate) or increase supported rent (different sub-market/bed-bath mix).
What DSCR do I need for a DSCR loan in Charlotte?
Most lenders publish a minimum DSCR between 1.00 and 1.25:
1.25+ → stronger approval odds and better pricing.
1.10–1.24 → may be approved with pricing hits, lower LTV, or extra reserves.
~1.00 → “break-even” deals exist at some lenders with tighter terms.
<1.00 → rare; only select programs and usually significant trade-offs.
Example Scenarios
Rent $3,000; PITIA $2,400 → DSCR 1.25 (often best pricing tier).
Rent $3,000; PITIA $2,700 → DSCR 1.11 (possible approval; expect lower LTV or higher rate).
Rent $3,000; PITIA $3,050 → DSCR 0.98 (most lenders decline; a few might consider with heavy mitigants).
Underwriting reality: A higher DSCR gives you more leverage (higher LTV), better rates, and fewer conditions. Underwrite conservatively so your DSCR stays ≥ the target even if taxes/insurance/HOA come in higher than expected.
What Counts as Rental Income for DSCR Calculations?
Lenders consider gross rent supported by either the appraisal’s 1007 market rent or actual leases (program-dependent). For short-term or mid-term rentals (STR/MTR), some lenders use historical statements (e.g., 12–24 months) or market data, while others default to long-term rent even if you plan STR.
Common Approaches
Long-term lease: Use the lower of the lease or 1007’s market rent.
STR/MTR:
- Historic approach: 12–24 months of platform statements averaged to monthly.
- Market approach: Third-party data (program-specific) or underwrite as LTR if STR isn’t allowed.
Example (Lease vs Market)
Lease: $2,700; 1007: $2,600 → many lenders use $2,600 for DSCR.
For STR, last 12 months $60,000 gross; seasonality normalized to $5,000/mo. If the program allows this method and PITIA is $4,000, DSCR = 5,000 ÷ 4,000 = 1.25.
Bottom line: Confirm which rent source your lender will use before you write the offer—it can swing DSCR from pass to fail.
How Lenders Verify Rental Income Using Comparables
Lenders rely on the appraiser’s 1007 Comparable Rent Schedule to estimate market rent. The appraiser selects comparable rentals (similar bed/bath, condition, location, and time) and reconciles a monthly market rent for the subject property. For 2–4 units, they’ll often provide a unit-by-unit or overall market rent conclusion.
Example
Subject: 3-bed SFH. Comps average $2,650–$2,750 with a reconciled market rent $2,700.
If the actual lease is $2,850, many DSCR programs still use $2,700 (the lower of lease/market).
If PITIA = $2,250, DSCR = 2,700 ÷ 2,250 = 1.20.
STR/MTR note: Some DSCR programs request operating statements (e.g., AirDNA, platform histories) and may still cap or haircut that income for conservatism. If STR/MTR is not permitted by program/city/HOA, the lender may underwrite to long-term rent only.
Tip: Before ordering the appraisal, make sure your target rent is realistic. If the 1007 comes in low, your DSCR and LTV can suffer.
What reserves do DSCR lenders require?
Reserves are liquid funds available after closing to cover PITIA for a specified period (safety net). DSCR programs commonly require 3–12 months of PITIA reserves; more complex files (lower DSCR, cash-out, multiple properties, or LLC vesting) may require higher reserves.
Typical Ranges (Examples, Vary by Lender)
1–2 properties: 3–6 months PITIA.
3–5 properties or lower DSCR: 6–9 months PITIA.
Larger portfolios/cash-out/LLC: 9–12 months PITIA (sometimes more).
Example
PITIA $2,500/mo; reserve requirement 6 months → $15,000 post-closing.
With lower DSCR (1.10) or a cash-out refi, a lender may ask for 9 months → $22,500.
What counts as reserves? Checking/savings, money market, some brokerage funds; retirement accounts may be discounted. Gift funds typically don’t count as reserves (program-specific).
What down payment is required (LTV) for DSCR loans?
True 0% down is uncommon in DSCR lending. Typical minimum down payments are 20–25% for purchases (higher LTVs may exist with pricing/DSCR constraints). You can reduce cash-to-close via seller credits, lender credits, or rate buydown strategies, but you’ll still need your down payment and reserves. There CAN be options for 15% down but this is very uncommon due to the DSCR ratio.
Example
Purchase $400,000; 20% down = $80,000; LTV 80%.
If the seller provides 3% credit ($12,000) toward closing costs and you take a modest lender credit in exchange for a slightly higher rate, cash-to-close may drop by $15–20k, but down payment and reserves remain required.
Work-around: Some investors use cross-collateral, pledged assets, or equity from another property (cash-out) to fund the down payment. Terms vary by lender; expect tighter DSCR and reserve standards when leverage rises.
DSCR cash-out refinance rules (LTV + seasoning)
Most DSCR cash-out refis allow you to tap equity on investment properties, subject to max LTV, seasoning, title, and valuation rules. Common features include:
Max LTV: Often 70–75% on cash-out.
Seasoning: Title often must be held 3–6 months (more if substantial value change). If you can document significant improvements or paid cash for a property; the seasoning requirements can change.
Use of funds: Generally flexible for investment purposes; large debts paid off may need documentation.
DSCR requirement: Property still needs to meet minimum DSCR at the new payment.
Example
Current value $500,000; 75% max LTV → new loan $375,000.
Existing payoff $300,000 → potential cash-out $75,000 minus costs.
If new PITIA becomes $2,600 and market rent is $3,120, DSCR = 1.20 → meets many programs.
Heads-up: Large “value jumps” may trigger flip/seasoning overlays. Ask your lender how they treat recent acquisitions and rehabs.
Do DSCR Loans Require Tax Returns or Income Verification?
Generally, no. The hallmark of DSCR lending is no personal income analysis and no tax returns required. Lenders focus on credit, assets/reserves, and the property’s DSCR.
What They Still Verify
Credit report & score
Assets/reserves (bank/brokerage/retirement statements)
Title/insurance/appraisal (1007)
Entity docs if vesting in an LLC/trust
Example
Borrower is self-employed with heavy write-offs. The property’s 1007 rent is $2,700 and PITIA is $2,100 → DSCR 1.29.
With 680+ credit, 6 months reserves, and 20–25% down, many DSCR programs can approve—no tax returns required.
Caveat: Some lenders may request basic employment/ownership info for compliance, but not to calculate DTI.
What Credit Score is Needed for a DSCR Loan?
Minimum FICO requirements vary, but many programs want 660+, with 680–700+ improving pricing/LTV. Lower scores can be eligible with lower LTV, higher DSCR, and more reserves.
Score Impact (Illustrative)
740+ → best pricing tiers; flex on LTV.
700–739 → solid pricing; typical LTVs.
660–699 → workable with DSCR ≥ 1.20 and stronger reserves.
<660 → limited options.
Example
Two borrowers, same property: rent $3,200, PITIA $2,600 → DSCR 1.23.
- Borrower A (740 FICO): Eligible at 80% LTV with better rate.
- Borrower B (672 FICO): May be capped at 75% LTV and a higher rate; reserves may increase from 6 to 9 months.
Tip: If possible, optimize credit (utilization, rapid rescore, dispute resolution) before locking.
Can You Use a DSCR Loan for a Fix-and-Flip Property?
Pure fix-and-flip (buy, rehab, sell) is typically financed via bridge/hard-money loans, not standard DSCR. DSCR is intended for buy-and-hold rentals. However, some investors rehab quickly and then complete a DSCR cash-out refi to hold long term once stabilized.
Common Path
Use bridge financing to acquire and rehab.
Stabilize with a tenant or MTR/STR history (as allowed).
Refi into DSCR once rent supports target DSCR and any seasoning requirements are met.
Example
Purchase: $250,000, rehab $50,000, all-in $300,000.
After repair value: $380,000.
Stabilized rent: $2,800, proposed DSCR PITIA $2,200 → 1.27.
At 75% LTV on $380k = $285,000 take-out (minus costs), the investor may recoup most of the bridge capital.
Bottom line: Use the right tool—bridge to stabilize, DSCR to hold.
Typical Interest Rates and Terms for DSCR Loans
DSCR rates are usually higher than conventional investment loans due to non-QM risk and streamlined docs. Terms vary by FICO, LTV, DSCR tier, occupancy history, and prepayment option.
Common DSCR Structures (Illustrative)
Feature | Typical Range |
Rate | Above conventional; pricing moves with market, FICO, LTV, DSCR |
Term | 30-yr fixed, or ARM (e.g., 5/6, 7/6, 10/6) |
Interest-only | Often available (e.g., 5–10 years), improves initial DSCR |
Example
Same property, two structures:
- 30-yr fixed, fully amortizing: PITIA $2,600 → with rent $3,100, DSCR 1.19.
- 10-yr interest-only: PITIA $2,350 initially → DSCR 1.32 (easier approval/ pricing).
Choose based on your hold horizon, cash-flow target, and exit plan.
Common DSCR Mistakes That Kill Approvals
Using the wrong rent figure (lease vs 1007 market rent)
Underestimating PITIA (tax/insurance/HOA change the ratio)
Not planning for reserves post-close
Assuming seller credits replace down payment (they reduce closing costs, not down payment)
Not confirming STR/PadSplit income method before contract




Comments