DSCR Loan vs Conventional Loan | Which Is Right for Investors? | Bayou Mortgage
DSCR Loan Guide

DSCR Loan vs Conventional Loan

Conventional loans qualify on your personal income. DSCR loans qualify on the property's income. For real estate investors — especially self-employed ones — the difference is significant. Here's how to choose.

✅ No W-2s or tax returns on DSCR✅ LLC vesting on DSCR✅ Side-by-side comparison
Get Your Free DSCR Quote
No credit pull  ·  No obligation  ·  60 seconds
Step 1 of 3  —  Property Details
🌟

You're all set!

We'll reach out within one business day with your DSCR options.

By submitting you agree to be contacted by Bayou Mortgage. NMLS #1845349. Equal Housing Lender.
DSCR Loan Comparison

The Core Difference: How You Qualify

The most fundamental difference between a DSCR loan and a conventional investment property loan is how the lender determines whether you can afford the mortgage. Conventional lenders look at your personal income, employment history, and debt-to-income ratio. DSCR lenders look at the property's rental income relative to the loan payment.

For a W-2 employee with straightforward income, conventional financing often offers better rates and terms. For self-employed investors, business owners, or anyone whose tax returns don't reflect their true financial picture, DSCR loans remove the biggest barrier to investment property financing.

FactorDSCR LoanConventional Investment Loan
Qualifying income
Property rental income
Personal W-2 / tax returns
Income docs required
Generally none
2 yrs tax returns, W-2s, pay stubs
DTI calculation
Not used
Required — max ~45%
Min. credit score
620+ varies by lender
620–640+ (Fannie/Freddie)
Min. down payment
20–25%
15–25% (varies by program)
Interest rate
Typically 0.5–1.5% higher
Lower on average
LLC vesting
Available
Generally not allowed
Property count limit
No hard limit
Typically capped at 10
Prepayment penalty
Common on lower-rate programs
Generally none
STR income accepted
Yes, on select programs
No
Close in 21–30 days
Yes
30–45 days typical
Which Is Right for You

Who Each Loan Type Is Best For

DSCR Loan Is Usually Better If...

You're self-employed or a business ownerYour tax returns show less income than you actually earn. DSCR removes personal income from the equation entirely.
You already have 10+ financed propertiesConventional loans are capped at 10 financed properties per borrower. DSCR has no hard portfolio limit.
You want to close in an LLCConventional investment loans require personal name vesting. DSCR accommodates entity ownership.
You're financing a short-term rentalConventional loans don't count STR income. DSCR programs do on select products.
Your DTI is too high for conventionalDSCR doesn't use debt-to-income ratio as a qualifying metric — only the property's ratio matters.

Conventional May Be Better If...

You have strong W-2 income and simple returnsIf you can easily document income conventionally and your DTI is clean, conventional rates are typically lower.
You're buying your first investment propertyFirst-time investors with strong income profiles often get better rates through conventional channels.
You want the lowest possible rateConventional Fannie/Freddie programs typically offer lower rates than DSCR — if you qualify.
The property doesn't cash flow stronglyIf rent doesn't cover the mortgage, DSCR won't qualify. Conventional uses your personal income instead.
The Rate Tradeoff

How Much More Do DSCR Loans Cost?

DSCR loans typically carry interest rates 0.50–1.50% higher than conventional investment property loans. The spread varies based on your credit score, LTV, and the rate environment. Here's how that cost difference looks in real dollars on a $300,000 loan:

Loan TypeRate ExampleMonthly P&IAnnual Cost10-Year Cost
Conventional
7.25%
$2,046
$24,552
$245,520
DSCR (+0.50%)
7.75%
$2,148
$25,776
$257,760
DSCR (+1.00%)
8.25%
$2,253
$27,036
$270,360
DSCR (+1.50%)
8.75%
$2,360
$28,320
$283,200
💡

The Rate Premium Is Often Worth It

For self-employed investors who can't qualify conventionally, the question isn't "is DSCR cheaper?" — it's "can I get the deal done?" For investors who could qualify either way, the LLC flexibility, faster closing, and no income doc simplicity often justify the rate difference. The break-even depends on your specific scenario.

Scaling Your Portfolio

DSCR vs Conventional for Portfolio Growth

One of the clearest advantages of DSCR over conventional for serious investors is the absence of a property count cap. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac limit conventional financing to 10 financed properties per borrower. Once you hit that ceiling, conventional lending closes — and DSCR becomes the primary path forward.

Conventional Portfolio Limits

10 financed property capFannie Mae limits borrowers to 10 financed properties including primary residence. Once reached, no more conventional investment loans.
DTI compounds with each propertyEvery new mortgage raises your DTI. Eventually personal income can't support additional conventional loans even below the 10-property cap.
Personal name onlyConventional loans must be in your personal name — no LLC ownership, limiting asset protection and estate planning options.

DSCR Portfolio Scaling

No hard property count limitEach DSCR loan is underwritten on its own property cash flow — your portfolio size doesn't count against you.
DTI not a factorPersonal debt load doesn't affect DSCR qualification — each property stands on its own.
Entity ownership supportedEach property can be held in its own LLC, creating clean liability separation across a growing portfolio.
Quick Reference

DSCR vs Conventional: Quick Reference

The most important differences at a glance for real estate investors deciding between loan types.

FactorDSCR LoanConventional
Best for
Self-employed, portfolio investors, LLC owners
W-2 borrowers, first investment property
Income docs
None required
2 yrs tax returns + W-2s
Rate
0.5–1.5% higher
Lower
Property limit
None
10 financed max
LLC vesting
Yes
No
STR income
Yes, select programs
No
Close time
21–30 days
30–45 days

Bayou Mortgage — NMLS #1845349. Equal Housing Lender.

Not Sure Which Loan Type Fits Your Deal?

Tell us about your property, income situation, and goals — we'll recommend the right approach and get you pre-qualified.

Common Questions

DSCR vs Conventional FAQ

Is a DSCR loan more expensive than a conventional loan? +
Typically yes — DSCR loans carry rates 0.50–1.50% higher than conventional investment property loans on average. However, for self-employed borrowers, the comparison is often irrelevant because they can't qualify for conventional financing at all. For investors who could qualify either way, the added cost of DSCR is often justified by the LLC flexibility, faster close, and simplified documentation.
Can I have both a conventional and a DSCR loan at the same time? +
Yes — many investors use a mix of both. They may have conventional loans on their first few properties and transition to DSCR as they scale beyond 10 properties or as their portfolio becomes too complex for conventional DTI calculations. There's no restriction on holding both types simultaneously.
Can I refinance a conventional investment loan into a DSCR loan? +
Yes — this is a common transition, particularly for investors who want to move properties into an LLC, simplify their income documentation, or free up their conventional loan capacity for a primary residence purchase. See our DSCR refinance guide for how that process works.
Which is faster to close — DSCR or conventional? +
DSCR loans typically close faster. Conventional investment loans often take 30–45 days due to the income verification requirements. DSCR loans can close in 21–30 days because there's no employment verification, no tax return analysis, and no DTI calculation — the underwriting is more streamlined.