DSCR Loan Pros and Cons | Honest Breakdown for Investors | Bayou Mortgage
DSCR Loan Guide

DSCR Loan Pros and Cons

DSCR loans solve real problems for real estate investors — but they're not the right tool for every deal. Here's an honest breakdown of the advantages and limitations so you can make the right call.

✅ No income docs required✅ Higher rates than conventional✅ Honest comparison
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The Advantages

DSCR Loan Pros

DSCR loans were purpose-built to solve the qualification challenges that conventional financing creates for real estate investors. These are the areas where they genuinely stand out.

No personal income documentation requiredNo W-2s, no tax returns, no employment verification. This is the single biggest advantage for self-employed investors, business owners, and anyone whose tax returns understate their true financial position. The property's rental income is all that matters for qualification.
No debt-to-income ratio calculationYour existing debts — car loans, student loans, other mortgages — don't affect your ability to qualify for another DSCR loan. Each property is evaluated on its own cash flow, not your personal debt load. This is especially powerful for portfolio investors who would be disqualified by conventional DTI limits.
No hard limit on the number of properties you can financeConventional lending caps you at 10 financed properties. DSCR has no equivalent ceiling. Investors with 15, 20, or 50+ properties continue using DSCR loans to grow — each new deal evaluated independently.
LLC and entity vesting availableConventional investment loans require personal name ownership. DSCR loans accommodate LLCs, giving investors the liability protection and portfolio organization that serious real estate investors need. See the LLC guide.
Faster closing than conventionalStripping out income verification simplifies the underwriting process. DSCR loans typically close in 21–30 days versus 30–45 for conventional investment loans — meaningful when you're competing for a deal.
Short-term rental income accepted on select programsConventional loans don't count Airbnb or VRBO income. DSCR programs exist that use AirDNA market data to qualify STR properties on projected rental income — opening up a class of deals that wouldn't qualify any other way.
Available to foreign nationalsNon-US citizens and non-residents can qualify on select DSCR programs — typically not possible with conventional or agency financing. See the foreign national guide.
30-year fixed available — no balloonUnlike hard money or many commercial loans, DSCR offers true 30-year fixed financing. No balloon maturity, no forced refinance, stable payment for the life of the loan.
The Limitations

DSCR Loan Cons

DSCR loans have real tradeoffs. Being clear-eyed about these limitations helps you use the product correctly and avoid surprises.

Higher interest rates than conventionalDSCR loans typically run 0.50–1.50% higher than conventional investment property loans. For a $300,000 loan, that's roughly $100–$300/month in additional interest cost. The qualification simplicity comes at a price — literally. If you can qualify conventionally and the property doesn't need LLC vesting or STR treatment, conventional may be cheaper.
The property must cash flowIf the rental income doesn't cover the mortgage payment, DSCR doesn't work — your strong personal income doesn't help. Properties in high-cost markets where cap rates are compressed may not produce a qualifying DSCR ratio at typical down payment levels. Strong personal income is irrelevant; the numbers have to work on the property itself.
Higher minimum down payment than owner-occupied financingInvestment property financing always requires more equity than primary residence loans. DSCR loans typically start at 20–25% down on purchases — there's no 3% or 5% down option. See down payment requirements.
Prepayment penalties are commonMany DSCR programs — especially lower-rate ones — include step-down prepayment penalties (typically 5/4/3/2/1). If you sell or refinance in the first few years, the penalty can be significant. This matters most for investors with shorter hold timelines. See the prepayment penalty guide.
Investment property only — no primary residencesDSCR loans are strictly for non-owner-occupied investment properties. If you're buying a home you intend to live in, DSCR is not an option regardless of how well the property might cash flow as a rental.
Minimum credit score requirements still applyDSCR removes personal income from the equation but doesn't remove credit requirements. Most programs start at 620–640, with better rates above 700–720. Poor credit still limits program access and increases your rate even when the property cash flows well.
Distressed and vacant properties have limitationsDSCR requires the property to be habitable and rentable. Properties under active renovation, in poor condition, or with no marketable rent comps may not qualify until they're stabilized. Hard money is the right tool for those situations — DSCR comes after stabilization.
Is It Right for You

When a DSCR Loan Is the Right Choice

Strong Fit — Use DSCR When:

You're self-employed or have complex incomeTax returns understate your earnings — DSCR removes the personal income barrier entirely.
You're scaling a rental portfolio beyond 10 propertiesConventional caps you. DSCR doesn't. This is the clearest use case.
You need LLC ownershipAsset protection requires entity vesting — DSCR is built for this.
The property cash flows at a 1.0+ DSCRThe deal works on the property's own merits — no personal income needed.

Poor Fit — Reconsider If:

You have simple W-2 income and few propertiesConventional likely offers better rates with less hassle for straightforward profiles.
The property doesn't produce a qualifying DSCRNo amount of strong personal income fixes a failing DSCR ratio. Consider a bank statement loan instead if your income is strong.
You plan to sell or refinance within 2–3 yearsPrepayment penalties on lower-rate programs can offset the financing benefit if your hold timeline is short.
The property needs significant workDSCR isn't designed for rehab projects — start with hard money and refinance after stabilization.
Quick Reference

DSCR Loan Pros and Cons: Summary

The most important advantages and limitations at a glance.

ProsCons
No W-2s or tax returns
Higher rate than conventional
No personal DTI calculation
Property must cash flow
No property count limit
20–25% down minimum
LLC vesting available
Prepayment penalties common
Faster close (21–30 days)
Investment property only
STR income accepted on select programs
Distressed properties not eligible
30-year fixed — no balloon
Credit score still matters

Bayou Mortgage — NMLS #1845349. Equal Housing Lender.

Not Sure If a DSCR Loan Is Right for Your Deal?

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Common Questions

DSCR Pros and Cons FAQ

Is a DSCR loan worth it if I can qualify for conventional? +
It depends on what you need. If you want to hold the property in an LLC, conventional isn't an option — DSCR is. If you're approaching or past 10 financed properties, DSCR is necessary. If you simply want the lowest rate and conventional is available to you with straightforward documentation, conventional financing is likely cheaper. Many investors use DSCR and conventional strategically depending on the specific deal.
What's the biggest risk of a DSCR loan? +
The most significant risk is cash flow dependency. Because qualification is based on rental income, any sustained vacancy or rent reduction affects both the property's investment performance and your loan-to-income position. DSCR loans are designed for stabilized rental properties — they're not designed to carry properties through extended vacancies. Maintaining adequate cash reserves (6+ months of PITIA) is the primary risk mitigation.
How does the prepayment penalty affect the DSCR loan decision? +
Significantly, if your hold timeline is short. A 5/4/3/2/1 step-down penalty on a $300,000 loan equals $15,000 in year one. If you're confident you'll hold for 5+ years, accepting the penalty in exchange for a lower rate often makes financial sense. If you're less certain about the hold period, a no-penalty program may be worth the higher rate. See the full prepayment penalty guide for a break-even analysis framework.
Can I refinance out of a DSCR loan later? +
Yes — you can refinance a DSCR loan into another DSCR loan, into a conventional loan (if you qualify), or into other programs at any time. The main consideration is any active prepayment penalty. Once the penalty period expires, you have full flexibility to refinance into the best available product at that time.