Last updated: May 2025
Quick Answer
DSCR loans cover most income-producing residential investment properties: single-family rentals, 2-4-unit buildings, warrantable condos, townhomes, and many short-term rentals such as Airbnb and VRBO. The property must be non-owner-occupied and generally rent-ready. Properties that typically fall outside standard DSCR programs include 5+-unit buildings, raw land, properties requiring major rehab, and most manufactured homes.
Learn more about DSCR loans with GO Mortgage.Quick DSCR property eligibility guide
Typically eligible
- Single-family rentals
- Duplexes, triplexes, and fourplexes
- Warrantable condos
- Townhomes
- Airbnb and short-term rentals
- Rent-ready investment properties
May require specialized programs
- Non-warrantable condos
- Mixed-use properties
- Rural properties
- Condotels
Usually not eligible
- Raw land
- Major fixer-uppers
- Manufactured homes
- 5+ unit apartment buildings
The one rule behind every DSCR property requirement
A DSCR loan qualifies you based on a property’s ability to generate rental income, so the central question a lender asks about any property is simple: Can it reliably produce rent that covers its mortgage payment?
That question explains nearly every eligibility rule.
- Properties with predictable income that are easy to value and resell qualify readily
- Properties with uncertain income, limited marketability, or specialized use face restrictions
Keep that lens in mind, and the rules below make intuitive sense.
There’s also one universal requirement: The property must be non-owner-occupied. DSCR loans are investment products; you can’t use one to finance the home you live in.
Why some property types are harder to finance with DSCR loans
DSCR lenders prefer properties with stable rental demand, reliable valuations, and predictable resale markets. Properties that are difficult to appraise, harder to rent, or slower to sell create additional risk for lenders, which is why some property types require specialized programs or stricter terms.
Property types that easily qualify for DSCR financing
Most standard residential investment properties are eligible under typical DSCR programs.
- Single-family rentals: the most common and straightforward DSCR-eligible property type
- 2-4 unit properties: duplexes, triplexes, and fourplexes are widely accepted and often produce strong ratios
- Warrantable condos: condos that meet conventional warrantability standards qualify easily
- Townhomes and PUDs: planned unit developments and townhomes are generally treated like single-family homes
- Long-term rentals: any of the above leased on standard 12-month terms
These types share the traits lenders favor: clear market value, established rental demand, straightforward appraisal. If you’re buying in any of these categories, eligibility is rarely the obstacle.
Can DSCR loans be used for Airbnb properties?
Yes. Many DSCR lenders allow short-term rentals using either documented platform income or a market rent appraisal.
Short-term rentals, such as Airbnb, VRBO, and similar platforms, are often eligible for many DSCR programs. However, they’re underwritten differently because their income is variable rather than fixed by a lease.
Lenders generally establish qualifying income one of two ways:
- Documented platform income: if the property has an Airbnb or VRBO history, the lender may use that revenue
- Market rent appraisal: for newly acquired or unproven properties, a Form 1007 rent schedule estimates the market rent
Not every lender treats short-term rental income the same way. Some use long-term market rent even for a property you intend to operate short-term, which can significantly affect your qualifying ratio.
Confirm how a program handles the income before you make an offer.
Can DSCR loans be used for fixer-uppers?
Usually not. Most DSCR programs require properties to be rent-ready at closing.
Can DSCR loans finance apartment buildings?
Standard residential DSCR loans typically cap at 4 units. Properties with five or more units typically require commercial financing.
Property types with conditions or restrictions
Some properties can qualify but require the right program or carry additional scrutiny.
| Property type | Eligibility note |
| Non-warrantable condos | Possible, but requires a program that allows them; expect tighter terms |
| Rural properties | Eligible, but marketability and rentability get extra review |
| Mixed-use properties | Sometimes eligible if primarily residential; varies by lender |
| Condotels | Often restricted; requires a specialized program |
| Larger acreage | May face limits on the land value counted toward the property |
The common thread is uncertainty.
A non-warrantable condo or condotel raises questions about marketability and association stability; a rural property raises questions about resale and re-rental speed. None are automatic disqualifiers, but they narrow the pool of available programs.
Property types that typically don’t qualify for DSCR loans
Certain properties generally fall outside the scope of standard residential DSCR lending. That doesn’t always mean no financing exists, only that a DSCR loan is usually the wrong tool.
- 5+ unit buildings: these cross into commercial territory and require a commercial DSCR or multifamily loan
- Raw land: with no income and no structure, there’s nothing for a DSCR to measure
- Properties needing major rehab: a property that isn’t rent-ready usually requires a bridge or rehab loan first
- Most manufactured and mobile homes: frequently excluded due to valuation and resale concerns
- Properties with significant habitability issues: lenders need the property to be rentable as-is
If your target property falls into one of these categories, it doesn’t mean an immediate “no financing.”
A different loan structure is often the best solution, such as a commercial loan for a larger building, or a renovation loan to get a property rent-ready before refinancing into a DSCR loan.
How property condition affects eligibility
Even an eligible property type must meet a condition standard.
Because DSCR loans are built around income generation, the property generally needs to be rent-ready at closing. Cosmetic wear is usually fine; significant deferred maintenance, safety hazards, or unfinished construction can stall an application.
If your property needs work, a common strategy is to use a short-term renovation or bridge loan to complete repairs, then refinance into a DSCR loan once the property is stabilized and producing income.
Matching the right property to the right loan
The short version: if a property produces reliable rental income, is easy to value, and is ready to rent, it probably qualifies for a DSCR loan. The further a property drifts from those traits, the more likely you’ll need a specialized program or an entirely different loan structure.
Knowing where your target property lands on that spectrum before you write an offer saves time and protects your earnest money.
Not sure if your property qualifies?
Before you submit an offer, talk with a GO Mortgage loan officer about your property’s eligibility, rental strategy, and financing options. We can help you determine whether a DSCR loan, a bridge loan, or another investment property program is the best fit.
Explore Your Investment Property Financing Options.FAQs: Properties that qualify for DSCR loans
Yes. Warrantable condos qualify readily. Non-warrantable condos can also work, but you’ll need a program that specifically allows them, and terms may be tighter.
Yes. Many DSCR programs accept short-term rentals, using either documented platform income or a market rent appraisal to establish qualifying income.
Yes. Two- to four-unit residential properties are widely eligible and often yield favorable ratios due to their combined rental income.
No. Properties with five or more units cross into commercial lending and require a commercial DSCR or multifamily loan rather than a standard residential DSCR product.
A property that isn’t rent-ready usually requires a renovation or bridge loan first. Once repairs are complete and the property is producing income, you can refinance into a DSCR loan.
