If you are financing a rental property in 2026, you have two main options: a conventional loan or a DSCR loan. Both can get you into an investment property, but they work very differently — and choosing the wrong one can cost you time, deals, and money.
This guide breaks down exactly how DSCR loans and conventional loans compare for real estate investors, so you can make the right call for your situation.
What Is a Conventional Loan?
A conventional loan is a mortgage that follows guidelines set by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. For investment properties, conventional loans require full income documentation, a strong debt-to-income ratio, and typically limit borrowers to 10 financed properties. They are the default option for most homebuyers — but they were designed for primary residences, not investment portfolios.
What Is a DSCR Loan?
A DSCR loan qualifies based on the rental income of the investment property rather than your personal income. The lender calculates your Debt Service Coverage Ratio — dividing the property's gross monthly rent by its total monthly debt obligations. If the property cash flows, you can likely qualify. No W-2s, tax returns, or employment verification required.
Side-by-Side Comparison
- Income docs required: DSCR — none. Conventional — W-2s, tax returns, pay stubs.
- Qualification basis: DSCR — property cash flow. Conventional — personal DTI.
- Property limit: DSCR — unlimited. Conventional — max 10 financed properties.
- LLC borrowing: DSCR — fully supported. Conventional — generally not allowed.
- Foreign nationals: DSCR — programs available. Conventional — generally not available.
- Self-employed: DSCR — no income docs needed. Conventional — 2 years tax returns required.
- Short-term rentals: DSCR — AirDNA income accepted. Conventional — traditional lease only.
- Min credit score: DSCR — 660+. Conventional — 620–640 (investment).
- Max LTV (DSCR at UTM): Up to 80% on purchase, 75% cash-out. Conventional investor: typically 75–80%.
When a DSCR Loan Is the Better Choice
A DSCR loan is almost always the better option for investment properties if any of the following apply to you:
- You are self-employed and your tax returns show less income than you actually earn
- You already have more than 4 financed properties and are approaching conventional limits
- You want to hold the property in an LLC for liability protection
- You are a foreign national without U.S. credit history
- You are financing an Airbnb or short-term rental property
- You want to close faster without the paperwork burden of conventional underwriting
- You are building a portfolio of 5, 10, or 20+ properties
When a Conventional Loan Might Make Sense
Conventional loans can still be the right call in certain situations:
- You are buying your first or second investment property and have strong W-2 income
- You want the absolute lowest rate and have pristine credit and low LTV
- You are house hacking — living in one unit of a small multifamily property
For most active real estate investors, however, conventional loans become a bottleneck quickly. The 10-property cap, the DTI restrictions, and the inability to borrow in an LLC all create friction that DSCR loans eliminate entirely.
DSCR Loan Rates vs. Conventional Rates
DSCR loan rates are typically 0.5% to 1.5% higher than conventional rates for investment properties. However, this premium is often worth it when you consider the benefits — no income documentation, LLC borrowing, unlimited properties, and faster closings. For many investors, the ability to close a deal at all is worth more than a slightly lower rate.
At United Trust Mortgage we shop the entire DSCR market — Angel Oak, Deephaven, Verus, A&D, Acra, and others — to find the lowest rate for your specific scenario. For a current rate quote based on your file, contact us directly.
Can You Use Both?
Absolutely — and many experienced investors do. A common strategy is to use conventional loans for the first few properties while rates are favorable, then transition to DSCR loans once you hit the conventional limit or your income documentation becomes a constraint. The two loan types can coexist in a well-structured investment portfolio.
The Bottom Line
For real estate investors focused on building a rental portfolio, DSCR loans offer flexibility, speed, and scalability that conventional loans simply cannot match. If the property cash flows, you can likely qualify — regardless of your personal income, employment status, or how many properties you already own.
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United Trust Mortgage is an NMLS-licensed mortgage broker (NMLS #2591548). This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a loan commitment or offer to lend. Rates and terms subject to change. Equal Housing Lender.
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