
What Is a DSCR Loan and
How Does It Work?
If you’re a real estate investor who’s been turned down for a conventional loan — or told you don’t qualify because your tax return doesn’t show enough income — a DSCR loan may be exactly what you’ve been looking for. Here’s everything you need to know.
Why This Loan Exists (And Who It’s Really For)
The traditional mortgage system was built for W-2 employees. It assumes you work for someone, receive a consistent paycheck, and file a simple tax return. Real estate investors don’t fit that mold — and most lenders penalize them for it.
Self-employed investors maximize deductions to minimize taxes. That’s smart tax strategy. But it creates a problem: your tax return shows low income, even when your properties generate strong cash flow. When you go to qualify for another investment loan, the lender looks at that return and says no.
“A DSCR loan doesn’t look at you. It looks at your property. If the rental income covers the debt — you qualify.”
That’s the core idea. And it changes everything for investors who’ve been locked out of conventional financing.
What Does DSCR Actually Mean?
DSCR stands for Debt Service Coverage Ratio. It’s a simple calculation:
DSCR = Monthly Rental Income ÷ Monthly Debt Obligation
Example: If your property rents for $2,500/month and your PITI (principal, interest, taxes, insurance) is $2,000/month, your DSCR is 1.25. That’s a healthy number — and most DSCR lenders want to see 1.0 or higher.
A DSCR of 1.0 means the property exactly breaks even. Above 1.0 means it cash flows positively. Some lenders will approve DSCR ratios below 1.0 with compensating factors — higher credit scores, larger down payments, or strong reserves.
How a DSCR Loan Is Different From a Conventional Mortgage
| Feature | Conventional Loan | DSCR Loan |
|---|---|---|
| Qualification basis | Personal income / W-2 | Property rental income |
| Tax returns required | Yes (2 years) | No |
| Pay stubs required | Yes | No |
| Self-employed friendly | Difficult | Yes |
| Foreign nationals eligible | Rarely | Yes |
| ITIN holders eligible | Limited | Yes |
| Investment properties only | No (primary ok) | Yes |
What Property Types Qualify?
- Single-family investment homes
- Duplexes, triplexes, and quadplexes (2–4 unit)
- Short-term rentals and Airbnb properties
- Non-warrantable condos used as rentals
- Mixed-use properties with a residential component
DSCR loans are for investment properties only — not your primary residence. The property must generate rental income (or be eligible to). Most lenders use current lease agreements or market rent analysis (from an appraiser) to calculate DSCR.
What Are the Typical DSCR Loan Requirements in Florida?
- Minimum DSCR: 1.0 or higher (some lenders allow lower with compensating factors)
- Minimum credit score: 620–680 depending on lender and LTV
- Down payment: 20–25% for purchases; 25–30% for cash-out refis
- Property must be non-owner-occupied
- Loan amounts: Typically $100,000–$3M+
Is a DSCR Loan Right for You?
If you own — or are purchasing — a Florida rental property and you’re tired of being penalized by a mortgage system that wasn’t built for investors, DSCR financing is worth a serious conversation. It’s not a workaround or a risky product. It’s purpose-built for exactly what you’re doing: investing in income-producing real estate.
Ready to see if your property qualifies?
No W-2. No tax returns. Just your property’s performance. Get a straight answer in one conversation.
