Investment Loans
DSCR Loans in Arizona: Qualify on Rental Income, Not Tax Returns
If your tax returns don’t tell the whole story, a DSCR loan lets the property’s own cash flow do the qualifying.
If you’re buying an Arizona rental and your tax returns don’t show enough income to qualify the traditional way, a DSCR loan may be your path. Instead of your personal income, it asks a simpler question: does the property pay for itself?
Key takeaways
- A DSCR loan qualifies on the property’s rental income versus its mortgage payment – not your W-2s or tax returns.
- Most Arizona programs look for a ratio around 1.0 to 1.25 and 20-25% down, though a stronger file can widen your options.
- They can close in an LLC, don’t hit your personal debt-to-income, and don’t cap the number of properties you finance – built for scaling a portfolio.
What is a DSCR loan?
DSCR stands for Debt Service Coverage Ratio. It’s a type of investment-property mortgage that qualifies you based on the rent a property brings in relative to what it costs to carry each month. A conventional investor loan digs through your tax returns, W-2s, and personal debt-to-income. A DSCR loan largely sets that aside and underwrites the deal on the property’s numbers.
That difference matters most for the borrowers conventional underwriting treats harshly: self-employed investors who write down income, buyers with several financed properties already, and anyone whose returns don’t reflect their real cash position. If the rent covers the payment, you’re most of the way there.
DSCR loans with The Starks Team
We’re an independent brokerage, so we shop your DSCR scenario across a range of investor lenders instead of forcing it into one box – and we’ve done it for Arizona investors for 24 years.
How is the DSCR ratio calculated?
The math is refreshingly simple. Divide the property’s monthly rent by its full monthly payment – principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and any HOA dues (lenders call this PITIA):
- DSCR of 1.25 – the rent covers 125% of the payment. The property clears $1.25 of income for every $1.00 of cost. Lenders love this.
- DSCR of 1.00 – rent and payment break even. Still financeable with many programs.
- DSCR below 1.00 – the payment outruns the rent. Some lenders still lend here with a larger down payment or reserves; pricing tightens.
DSCR loan vs. conventional investment loan
| Feature | DSCR loan | Conventional investor loan |
|---|---|---|
| Qualifies on | Property rental income | Your personal income + DTI |
| Tax returns required | No | Yes |
| Can close in an LLC | Usually yes | Typically no |
| Limit on financed properties | Generally none | Often capped (commonly ~10) |
| Typical down payment | 20-25% | 15-25% |
| Pricing | Usually priced above conventional | Often lower |
Before you write an offer, run the rent against a realistic payment that includes taxes, insurance, and HOA – not just principal and interest. A deal that looks like a 1.2 on the back of an envelope can slip under 1.0 once escrows are in. Knowing the real ratio up front tells you which programs are in play.
A DSCR loan doesn’t ask what you made last year. It asks what the property will make this year.– Ken Starks, independent mortgage broker
How to get a DSCR loan in Arizona
- Pin down the property’s rentUse a signed lease if you have one, or a market-rent appraisal (Form 1007) for a vacant or new purchase. This number drives everything.
- Estimate the full PITIAAdd taxes, insurance, and HOA to your principal and interest so you know the true monthly cost – and the true ratio.
- Line up your down payment and reservesPlan on 20-25% down plus a few months of payments in reserve. Both can influence your options and pricing.
- Let us shop itWe match your scenario – ratio, credit, property type, short-term vs. long-term – to the investor lenders whose guidelines actually fit it.
- Close, often in an LLCMany investors title in an LLC for liability and portfolio reasons. DSCR programs typically allow it.
DSCR pricing usually sits above owner-occupied and conventional investor loans because the lender leans on the asset, not your income. That’s the trade for the flexibility. Weigh the payment against the cash flow and your longer plan for the property – the rate is one input, not the whole decision.
Key terms
- DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio)
- Monthly rent divided by the full monthly payment. The core number a DSCR loan is built on.
- PITIA
- Principal, Interest, Taxes, Insurance, and Association dues – the complete monthly housing cost used in the ratio.
- LTV (Loan-to-Value)
- The loan amount as a percentage of the property’s value. A 75% LTV means 25% down.
- Reserves
- Liquid funds – often a few months of payments – a lender wants to see after closing as a cushion.
Frequently asked questions
What credit score do you need for a DSCR loan?
Most DSCR programs start around a 620-680 minimum credit score, with better pricing and lower down payments as your score climbs. Exact minimums vary by lender and by the loan-to-value you need.
How is DSCR calculated?
Divide the property’s monthly rent by its full monthly payment (principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and any HOA). A DSCR of 1.25 means the rent covers 125% of the payment; 1.0 means it breaks even.
Can you get a DSCR loan with less than 20% down?
Most DSCR loans ask for 20-25% down. A stronger ratio, higher credit score, or extra cash reserves can widen your options, but requirements vary by lender and are subject to individual qualification.
Do DSCR loans work for short-term or Airbnb rentals in Arizona?
Many lenders allow short-term rental income on a DSCR loan when you can document it with market-rent data or a booking history. Program rules and local short-term-rental ordinances both matter, so confirm the specifics before you write an offer.
Thinking about your next Arizona rental?
Send us the address and the rent, and we’ll tell you which DSCR programs fit – no tax returns required to start the conversation.