DSCR vs Conventional Investment Property Loan in Texas: How to Pick
The whole decision comes down to one thing: what does the loan qualify on. A conventional investment property loan qualifies on your personal income and debt-to-income ratio. A DSCR loan qualifies on the property's rent. Conventional is usually cheaper. DSCR usually qualifies more investors and never touches your tax returns. Pick conventional while you can document income and have DTI room — move to DSCR when you can't, or when you've stacked up too many doors to keep going conventionally.
I'm Adam Styer, mortgage broker in Austin TX, NMLS #513013. I own rentals myself — long-term, short-term, a couple I'd rather forget. So when an investor asks me whether to finance their next Texas rental with a DSCR loan or a conventional loan, I'm not reading it off a rate sheet. I've signed both kinds of notes on my own deals.
Here's the honest version of how to choose. Not the version that pushes you toward whichever loan pays the lender more. The version that fits your actual situation.
What Does Each Loan Actually Qualify On?
This is the only distinction that matters, and almost everything else flows from it.
A conventional investment property loan qualifies on YOU. The lender pulls your tax returns, your W-2s or your pay stubs, and runs your debt-to-income ratio. They add up every monthly obligation you carry — your primary mortgage, car payments, student loans, the mortgages on rentals you already own — and measure it against your documented income. For loans run through Fannie Mae's automated underwriting, the maximum debt-to-income ratio tops out at 50% (Fannie Mae Selling Guide B3-6-02). If your number is over the line, the answer is no — no matter how good the property cash-flows.
A DSCR loan qualifies on the PROPERTY. DSCR stands for Debt Service Coverage Ratio: the property's monthly rent divided by its monthly principal, interest, taxes, and insurance. If the rent covers the payment with a little room, the property qualifies. Your personal income never enters the math. (Full mechanics in the DSCR loans Austin TX guide.)
That difference isn't a marketing gimmick — it's a regulatory one. DSCR loans are written for a business purpose, and credit extended primarily for a business purpose is exempt from Regulation Z under 12 CFR 1026.3(a)(1). That's why a DSCR loan can skip the personal ability-to-repay analysis that the CFPB requires on consumer mortgages under 12 CFR 1026.43. The loan is underwritten to the asset, not to your household budget.
Which One Is Cheaper?
Conventional. Almost always. Let me not pretend otherwise.
A conventional investment property loan is fully documented and sold to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, which means it carries their pricing and their lower cost of capital. A DSCR loan trades some of that rate away in exchange for not asking about your income. You're paying for access and convenience.
So if cost were the only factor, everyone would finance conventionally and we'd be done. But cost isn't the only factor — qualifying is. The cheaper loan you can't get isn't cheaper. It's unavailable. I won't quote you a rate in a blog post, because pricing moves daily and depends on your credit, your down payment, and the property. What I will tell you is the structural truth: conventional prices lower, DSCR qualifies broader.
How Much Do I Have to Put Down?
Both products want real skin in the game on a rental. Conventional investment-property financing sets your maximum loan-to-value by occupancy type, credit score, and unit count (Fannie Mae Selling Guide B2-1.2-01), and investment properties carry the lowest LTV ceilings on the matrix — expect to put down meaningfully more than you would on a primary residence.
DSCR down payments live in a similar range, often a bit higher, and they flex with the property's coverage ratio. A property that cash-flows strongly can earn a lower down payment; a property that barely covers its payment will need more equity to make the lender comfortable. The down payment difference between the two is usually smaller than investors expect — the real gap is in qualifying, not in the check you write at closing.
The Property-Count Ceiling Nobody Warns You About
This is the trap that catches investors who start out conventional and plan to scale.
Fannie Mae caps a borrower at 10 financed 1-4 unit properties when the new loan is for a second home or investment property (Fannie Mae Selling Guide B2-2-03). And it gets harder before you ever reach ten — reserve requirements climb as your property count rises, so each additional conventional rental demands more cash sitting in the bank.
But here's the part that stops most people well short of ten: every conventional mortgage you hold stacks onto your debt-to-income ratio. By the third or fourth financed rental, your DTI is often maxed out by the mortgages you already carry — even if every one of those properties cash-flows beautifully. The conventional system measures you, and you can only carry so much measured debt.
DSCR has no national property cap, because it never looks at your personal DTI. Each property stands on its own rent. That's the single biggest reason serious Texas investors move to DSCR for their later purchases — not because they prefer it, but because the conventional door closes and DSCR is the one still open.
Speed and the Tax-Return Problem
Conventional underwriting means a full income package: two years of tax returns, W-2s or pay stubs, the works. If your returns are clean and your income is salaried, that's fine. If you're self-employed and your returns show aggressive write-offs, your qualifying income on a conventional loan can be a fraction of what you actually bring home — and the deal dies on paper.
DSCR skips all of it. No tax returns, no W-2s, no income docs. The file moves on the property's rent, your credit, your reserves, and your down payment. For self-employed investors and 1099 earners, that's not a minor convenience — it's frequently the difference between qualifying and not. If write-offs are crushing your conventional income, the self-employed mortgage options and DSCR are usually the cleaner path.
What About Titling in an LLC?
A lot of investors want to hold rentals in an LLC for liability separation. Conventional Fannie/Freddie loans are made to individuals — you generally can't close a conventional loan in the name of an LLC, and transferring title into one after closing can trip the due-on-sale clause if you're not careful.
DSCR loans are built for this. Because they're business-purpose loans, closing in the name of your LLC is standard, not an exception. If LLC titling is part of your strategy from day one, that alone can point you toward DSCR even when you'd otherwise qualify conventionally.
So Which One Do You Pick?
Run yourself through four questions:
- Can you document your income cleanly? If yes and your DTI has room, conventional is probably your lowest-cost option. If your tax returns don't support the income, DSCR.
- How many financed properties do you already have? Under a few with DTI room — conventional. Stacked up and getting blocked — DSCR.
- Are you titling in an LLC? If yes, lean DSCR.
- Is this a long-term hold that cash-flows, or are you stretching? A property that covers its payment with room qualifies easily on DSCR and earns better terms.
Most investors I work with don't pick one for life. They use conventional while it's available and cheaper, then move to DSCR to keep building. The mistake is assuming you have to choose a lane and stay in it. You don't. You match the loan to the deal and to where you are in the build.
Want to run your actual numbers? The DSCR calculator shows whether a property cash-flows at today's payment, and the investment property loan overview walks the conventional side. Or just send me the deal and I'll tell you which loan fits — and price both if it's close.
Frequently Asked Questions
The difference is what the loan qualifies on. Conventional qualifies on your personal income and debt-to-income ratio — tax returns, W-2s, the full income package. DSCR qualifies on the property's rent divided by its payment, with no personal income verification, because it's a business-purpose loan exempt from the consumer ability-to-repay rule. Conventional usually prices lower; DSCR qualifies more investors.
Conventional almost always carries the lower rate because it's fully documented and sold to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. DSCR trades some rate for qualifying on rent instead of income. The better question is whether you can qualify conventionally at all — the cheaper loan you can't get isn't actually cheaper. W-2 investors usually win on cost with conventional; self-employed and portfolio investors often win on access with DSCR.
Fannie Mae caps a borrower at 10 financed 1-4 unit properties for second-home or investment loans, with reserves rising as the count grows. Most investors hit a DTI wall well before ten because each conventional mortgage stacks on their ratio. DSCR has no national property cap — it qualifies each property on its own rent — which is why investors scaling past a handful of doors move to DSCR.
No. A DSCR loan qualifies on the property's rent plus your credit, reserves, and down payment — no tax returns, W-2s, or pay stubs. That's why it's the standard answer for self-employed and 1099 investors whose write-offs crush their qualifying income on a conventional loan. Conventional investment loans require the full personal income documentation package.
Choose conventional when you can document income cleanly, your DTI has room, and you're under the 10-property financed ceiling — that's where conventional's lower rate and better terms pay off. Move to DSCR when your tax returns don't support the income, your DTI is maxed by existing mortgages, you're titling in an LLC, or you've hit the conventional cap. Many investors use both: conventional early, DSCR to keep scaling.
If you've got a Texas rental under contract or on your radar, send me the property and your situation. I'll tell you straight which loan fits — and if it's a close call, I'll price both so you can see the trade-off in dollars, not theory. I shop 40+ lenders, so I'm not stuck steering you toward one product.
Send your scenario here or book a quick call.
Talk soon,
Adam Styer
Adam Styer | HyperSmart Home Loans
NMLS# 513013 | (512) 956-6010