DSCR Loan Requirements: What You Need to Qualify in 2026

Can you qualify for a $750,000 rental property loan without showing a single W-2 or tax return? With a DSCR loan, yes—and that’s exactly why more investors are using them. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s 2026 CREF forecast, total commercial and multifamily mortgage originations are on pace to hit $805 billion this year—a 27% jump from 2025. A significant and growing share of that volume is DSCR lending, driven by investors who’ve hit their conventional loan limits or can’t qualify on personal income alone.

But “no income docs” doesn’t mean “no requirements.” Lenders still underwrite these loans carefully. Here’s what they’re actually looking at.

What you’ll learn:

  • How DSCR is calculated and what ratio you need
  • Minimum credit score, LTV, and reserve requirements
  • Which property types qualify—and which don’t
  • How rates are priced across credit and LTV tiers
  • What happens if your DSCR falls below 1.0

What Is a DSCR Loan?

A DSCR loan is a business-purpose mortgage that qualifies you on the rental income of the property—not your personal income. No W-2s, no tax returns, no pay stubs. The lender’s question is simple: does this property’s rent cover the debt service?

DSCR stands for Debt Service Coverage Ratio. These are non-QM loans, meaning they don’t conform to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac guidelines—which also means no cap on how many you can hold.

How DSCR Is Calculated

The formula: DSCR = Monthly Gross Rental Income ÷ Monthly PITIA

PITIA = Principal, Interest, Taxes, Insurance, and any Association dues (HOA). A property generating $3,000/month in rent against a $2,500 PITIA has a DSCR of 1.20—it covers its debt service by 120%.

A DSCR of exactly 1.0 means break-even. Most lenders calculate using the appraiser’s market rent opinion for long-term rentals. For short-term rentals (Airbnb, VRBO), most lenders now use comparable long-term market rents rather than projected STR revenue—a meaningful tightening from a few years ago.  However, we do work with STR specialist lenders that can underwrite based on STR market rents.

The Five Things Lenders Actually Check

1. DSCR Ratio

Most lenders require a minimum of 1.0. Some programs go down to 0.75–0.85 for well-qualified borrowers, but those come with trade-offs. A DSCR of 1.25 or higher puts you in the best position for rate pricing and maximum LTV.

Most lenders I work with set 1.0 as their floor and start shaving rate as the ratio strengthens toward 1.15 and above. If you’re right at 1.0, the deal works—it just won’t price at the top tier.

2. Credit Score

DSCR programs are credit-tiered:

FICO Range Max LTV Notes
620–659 50-65% Limited programs; higher rates; larger reserve requirements
660–699 70-75% Opens most programs; competitive pricing accessible
700–739 80% Full LTV; best rates; flexible reserves
740+ 80% Premium pricing tier; lowest available rates

I usually see 700–720 as the sweet spot for standard DSCR deals. The 660s are workable but leave rate on the table. Below 660, options narrow fast.

3. Loan-to-Value (Down Payment)

Standard DSCR programs go up to 80% LTV on purchases—a 20% down payment. In practice, 75% LTV (25% down) is more common for borrowers who aren’t at the top credit tier, and most lenders price 75% LTV more aggressively than 80%.

For cash-out refinances, the cap typically drops to 70–75% LTV. Plan to leave a bit more equity in the deal than you would on a purchase.

4. Cash Reserves

Reserves are the most underestimated part of a DSCR application. Standard requirement: 6 months of PITIA in liquid reserves after closing—after the down payment and closing costs are already paid. For larger loans the bar goes up:

  • Loans above $1.5M: 6–12 months of reserves
  • Loans above $2.5M: 12+ months, sometimes more

Reserves must be verified liquid: checking, savings, money market, or retirement accounts (typically at a 60–70% haircut). Equity in other properties doesn’t count.

5. Property Type

DSCR loans are built for income-producing residential investment properties. Eligible types:

  • Single-family homes (1–4 units)
  • Condominiums and townhomes (non-owner-occupied)
  • Short-term rentals in STR-compliant markets
  • Condotels (typically capped at $1.5M, 75% LTV)

What doesn’t qualify: primary residences, raw land, or properties with significant deferred maintenance.  For 5+ unit commercial multifamily, we have a seperate DSCR program.  Contact us for more info.

Documentation You’ll Actually Need

DSCR loans cut out most personal income paperwork—but you still provide documentation. Expect to supply:

  • Signed purchase contract (for purchases)
  • Current lease agreements or property management letter (for refinances)
  • Property appraisal including the appraiser’s rent opinion (Form 1007 or equivalent)
  • Bank statements to verify reserves (typically 2–3 months)
  • Insurance binder and HOA documentation if applicable
  • Entity documents if borrowing as an LLC (operating agreement, articles of organization)
  • STR permit / zoning verification for short-term rental properties

How Rates Are Priced in 2026

DSCR loans are non-QM and carry a rate premium over conventional investment property loans. In mid-2026, most qualified borrowers are seeing rates in the 7.0–8.5% range, with weaker credit or thinner ratios pushing into the 9%+ tier.

Four factors move the rate the most:

  • Credit score—the single biggest driver in DSCR pricing
  • LTV—every 5% of additional equity typically buys 25–50bps in rate
  • DSCR ratio—1.25+ gets meaningfully better pricing than 1.0
  • Loan amount—sub-$150K loans often carry surcharges; larger deals get more lender competition

Most DSCR loans also include a prepayment penalty—typically a step-down structure over 3–5 years (5/4/3/2/1 is common). Factor this into your exit strategy before you commit.

What If Your DSCR Is Below 1.0?

Sub-1.0 programs exist and they work—but go in with clear eyes. Some lenders in our network offer no-ratio DSCR loans, lending even when rental income doesn’t fully cover the debt service. The trade-offs: 25–30%+ down payment, 700+ credit score, higher rate. We can usually source a no-ratio program if the borrower’s credit and reserves are strong. The rate premium is real—typically 75–100bps over a standard 1.0 DSCR deal—but it opens the door to properties that would otherwise be unfundable.

From a Recent Deal

From a recent deal: I recently placed a DSCR loan for an investor in the Tampa market on a single-family home slated for medium-term rental. The appraised market rent came in at a DSCR of 1.08—thin but above the floor. Clean credit (720 FICO), 25% down, 6 months reserves verified. We got it closed in 19 days. The slightly thin DSCR meant one lender in our network passed, but a second approved at a small rate premium—roughly 25bps over their standard 1.15+ pricing.


Looking at a DSCR purchase or refinance? We place these nationally across 1–4 unit investment properties, short-term rentals, and condotels. Schedule a 15-minute call →


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I qualify for a DSCR loan with no income documentation?

Yes. DSCR loans require no W-2s, tax returns, or pay stubs. Qualification is based on the property’s rental income relative to its debt service. The lender will still pull your credit report and verify your assets—they just won’t touch your personal income picture.

How many DSCR loans can I have at once?

DSCR loans have no mandated portfolio cap—unlike conventional Fannie/Freddie investment loans, which limit most borrowers to 10 financed properties. Each lender sets its own concentration limits, but we’ve placed borrowers with 15+ financed properties through DSCR programs. We can also finance multiple properties into one loan, also known as a portfolio loan.

Can I use a DSCR loan for an Airbnb or short-term rental?

Yes, with caveats. Most lenders now use a market rent appraisal based on comparable long-term rents—not projected Airbnb revenue. You’ll also need to verify the property is in an STR-compliant jurisdiction.

What’s the maximum loan amount for a DSCR loan?

Most programs cap at $3–5 million per property. Loans above $2 million require stronger credit (720+), more reserves, and sometimes a higher DSCR minimum. Condotels are typically capped at $1.5 million.

Do DSCR loans have prepayment penalties?

Usually, yes. Most programs include a step-down prepayment penalty—often 5/4/3/2/1 over five years, though 3-year structures also exist. Price in the penalty before you commit.


Ready to Run Your DSCR Scenario?

We work with a national network of DSCR lenders across 1–4 unit residential investment properties, short-term rentals, and small-balance scenarios. Send us your property address, purchase price or value, credit score, current or projected rent, and annual taxes, insurance, HOA—we’ll respond within one business day with realistic terms.

Get a Quote → | Learn More About Willowbrook Capital


About the author

Patrick McCandless is the Principal of Willowbrook Capital LLC, a commercial mortgage brokerage based in Newington, Connecticut. He works with real estate investors, developers, and business owners nationally across bridge, rehab, ground-up construction, permanent financing, and other business-purpose mortgage programs, with a practical concentration in Sunbelt markets. Willowbrook Capital also operates in-house lending programs for residential DSCR, fix-and-flip, construction, and small-balance commercial transactions.

Patrick works directly with his clients from first call to closing—no quote-and-disappear, no handoffs to junior staff. He maintains active relationships with a national network of lenders across non-QM, agency, SBA, CMBS, life company, debt fund, REIT, bank and credit union capital sources, which lets him match each scenario to the right capital partner rather than forcing every deal through the same credit box.

Have a deal? Send your scenario to pmccandless@willowbrookcap.com or request a quote—he’ll respond within one business day.

Principal, Willowbrook Capital LLC | LinkedIn

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. Loan terms, rates, and availability vary by borrower, property, and market conditions. Consult Willowbrook Capital for scenario-specific guidance.

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