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DSCR Loans vs Conventional: Which Is Right for You?

Last updated: May 2026

If you're shopping for an investment property loan, you've probably realized you have more options than just a conventional mortgage. DSCR loans and conventional loans both get the job done, but they do it in very different ways. Understanding the differences helps you pick the right tool for your situation — and potentially save thousands of dollars or hours of frustration in the process.

The fundamental difference

The core distinction is simple: conventional loans qualify you based on your personal income. DSCR loans qualify you based on the property's income.

With a conventional investment property loan, the lender looks at your W-2s, tax returns, pay stubs, and employment history. They calculate your debt-to-income ratio (DTI) — the percentage of your personal income that goes toward debt payments — and use that to decide how much you can borrow.

With a DSCR loan, the lender looks at the property's rental income compared to the mortgage payment. If the rent covers the debt, you can qualify — even if your personal tax returns show minimal income or you're self-employed with complicated finances.

Everything else flows from this fundamental difference.

Side-by-side comparison

Here's how the two loan types stack up across the factors that matter most to investors:

Income documentation

Qualification method

Property limits

Entity ownership

Down payment

Interest rates

Closing speed

Prepayment penalties

Credit score minimums

When conventional is the better choice

Conventional loans make more sense when:

When a DSCR loan is the better choice

DSCR loans make more sense when:

Can you use both?

Absolutely — and many experienced investors do exactly that. A common strategy is to use conventional financing for your first several investment properties (to take advantage of lower rates), then switch to DSCR loans once you approach the conventional property limit or when the income documentation becomes burdensome.

Some investors also use DSCR loans strategically for specific deals — for example, when they need to close quickly, when the property is going into an LLC, or when they're between jobs and don't have current employment documentation.

There's no rule that says you have to pick one or the other forever. The smartest investors use whichever tool fits the specific deal and their current situation.

The rate difference — is it worth it?

The most common objection to DSCR loans is the higher interest rate. And it's a fair point — paying 1-2% more in interest is real money. On a $300,000 loan, 1% higher rate means roughly $200 more per month in interest.

But here's the thing: the rate isn't the only variable. Consider what the DSCR loan lets you do:

The right way to evaluate the rate difference is to look at the total picture: Does the property still cash-flow at the DSCR rate? Does the convenience and flexibility justify the premium? For many investors, the answer is yes. For others, conventional is the better path. Run the numbers for your specific deal.

The bottom line

Neither loan type is universally “better.” Conventional loans offer lower rates and no prepayment penalties. DSCR loans offer flexibility, speed, LLC ownership, and freedom from income documentation. The best choice depends on your income situation, portfolio size, timeline, and what matters most to you on a specific deal.

The most successful investors don't pick a camp — they understand both options and use whichever one fits. Think of DSCR and conventional as two tools in the same toolbox. The hammer isn't better than the screwdriver — it depends on what you're building.

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