Investor Financing
Your complete guide to financing investment and rental properties. This hub covers conventional investor loans, DSCR programs, hard money lending, portfolio loans, LLC ownership structures, and strategies for scaling a real estate portfolio with leverage.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How much do I need to put down on an investment property?
Conventional investment property loans typically require 15-25% down depending on the number of units and whether it is a single-family or multi-unit property. DSCR and portfolio loans may have different requirements.
What is a DSCR loan?
A Debt Service Coverage Ratio loan qualifies based on the property rental income relative to the mortgage payment rather than the borrower personal income. A DSCR of 1.0 or higher means the rent covers the payment.
Can I use rental income to qualify for an investment property mortgage?
Yes. Conventional loans allow 75% of documented rental income to offset the mortgage payment. DSCR loans use 100% of projected rent. The specific rules depend on whether the property has existing leases or uses market rent estimates.
Can I buy investment property in an LLC?
Most conventional and government loans require the borrower to hold title personally. DSCR loans, portfolio loans, and commercial loans often allow LLC ownership. Some borrowers purchase personally and transfer to an LLC after closing, though this may trigger a due-on-sale clause.
What is a hard money loan?
A hard money loan is a short-term, asset-based loan funded by private investors. It is used primarily for fix-and-flip projects or bridge financing. Rates are higher (typically 9-14%) and terms are short (6-24 months), but approval is faster and based primarily on property value.
How many investment properties can I finance?
Fannie Mae allows up to 10 financed properties per borrower. Beyond that, portfolio lenders and DSCR programs can finance additional properties. Each additional property typically requires more reserves.
What is a 1031 exchange?
A 1031 exchange allows investors to defer capital gains taxes by reinvesting proceeds from a property sale into a like-kind replacement property within specific timeframes (45 days to identify, 180 days to close). The exchange has specific mortgage and equity requirements.